5 Temmuz 2010 Pazartesi


Kurd
Ji Wîkîpediya
Here cem: navîgasyon, lêgerîn
Keca kurd.jpg

Kurd gelekî Rojhilata navîn e û navê endamên vî gelîn e. Kurd li Kurdistanê dijîn û Kurdistan welatke ku di nav tixûbên Tirkî, Sûrî, Iraq û Îranê de parvekiriye. Hejmara kurdan li gor çavkaniyan tê guhertin. Li gor hin çavkaniyan hejmara wan zêdetirî 40 miliyonan e, li gor hinên din nêzîkî 50 miliyonî ye.

Ji derveyî herçar dewletên ku basa wan hate kirin Kurd li Qafqasya (Ermenîstan û Azerbaycan), Rûsya, Turkmenîstan, Kazakîstan, Uzbekîstan, Israîl, Lubnan û li gelek dewletên din yên Rojhilata navîn jî dijîn; wekî din dîasporayeke Kurdan ya xwedî hejmereke mezin di serî de li Almanya li dewletên Rojava de jî çêbûye.
Tabloya Naverokê
[veşêre]

* 1 Ziman
* 2 Dîroka Çand û Wêjeya Kurdî
* 3 Bingeh û Rehên Kurdan
* 4 Civak û Jiyana Kurdan
* 5 Ayîn û Bawerî di Nav Kurdan de
* 6 Şûn û Warê Kurdan
o 6.1 Bajarên rojhilata Kurdistanê
o 6.2 Bajarên başûrê Kurdistanê
o 6.3 Hin bajarên bakurê Kurdistanê
o 6.4 Bajarên rojavayê Kurdistanê
* 7 Dîrok
* 8 Kurdên navdar
* 9 Çavkanî

Ziman

Zimanê Kurdan zimanê Kurdî (Kurmancî, Zazakî (Kirmanckî), Soranî, Lori u Goranî) ye. Zimanê Kurdî navên gelek zarava û zimanên ku ji aliyê Kurdan ve tên bi kar anîn e.
Dîroka Çand û Wêjeya Kurdî

Li gorî wan belgeyên ku di destê me de hene, derdikeve holê ku şaristaniyeke berz a neteweya kurdan hebûye. Ji mêj ve xwedî xet, nivîsandin û çandê bûne û mil bi milê neteweyên din ji bo pêşxistina çand û zanista xwe pêngav avêtine. Lê, piraniya cih û warên wî yên dîrokî ji ber derbasbûna demê û guherînên li cîhanê nemaze piştî îslamiyetê bandora ereban û dûgelên wan ji holê rabûne û têk çûne. Ev nivîs û nivîskarên ku mane jî girîngtirîn belge ne ji bo pêşandana şanî û dirûvê çanda netewe û welatparêzên kurd, em dixwazin mînakekê bidin: Hermîpos ku di sedsala sêyem a berî zayînê de jiyaye û hevçerxê Hexamenişiyan e dibêje : "pirtûkek îraniyan heye ku navê wê Avesta ye û bi zimanê Medî hatiye nivîsîn." Heredotos mêjûnasê bi nav û deng ê yewnanî di dîroka xwe de nivîsiye: "Diyaeko damezirînerê rêzepaşayetiya Medî berî dadpirsînê, şikala (hizirname9 xwendiye." Kîtziyasê Yewnanî ku bijîşkê qesra Erdeşîrê babek bûye, di pirtûkek mêjûyî de nivîsiye û tê de behsa rojnameyên qes û derbarên şahan de dike. Ev yek ji me re vê ronî dike ku di wê serdemê de jî bûyerên wê demê di rojnameyên der barî û yên girêdayî qesrê de hatine tomarkirin. Geznefonê yewnanî jî di pirtûka xwe ya bi navê "Perwerdekirina Kûriş" de behs û dabaşa hebûna dibistan , xwendin û perwerdehiyê ya li Îranê dike. Her wiha Eflatûnê zana, Plotarîkê mêjûnûs û çend mêjûnûsên din jî der heqê vê yekê de gelek tişt nivîsîne. Ew beşa "Tewrat"ê ku bi zimanê hexamenişînî hatiye nivîsîn dabaş û behsa yasa, xwendin, nivîsîn û çanda medan dike. li gorî van belgeyan derdikeve holê ku li Kurdistanê nivîsîn, xwendin, sikala, rojname, şaristaniyet, dadgeh û dadpirsîn hebûye. Her wiha neteweya kurd xwediyê desthilatî, wêje, zanyarî û çandê bûye. Û her wisa bûye sermeşqa pêşketin, çand û hunerê, ji hemû neteweyên ku cîhan pêk anîne. Her wisa piraniya cih û warên pêşiyên me, ji ber sedema derbasbûna demê têk çûne. ligel wê jî lat û textê kevirên, Bêstûn, Serpêla Zehaw, textê Silêman û şûn û warên din ên ku li Kurdistanê mane, girîngtirîn belgen e ji bo nîşandana jiyan û şaristaniyeta neteweya kurdan.


Bingeh û Rehên Kurdan

Kurd neteweyeke îranî ne û dîroka wan diçe sê hezar sal berî zayînê. Li gorî belgeyên dîrokî yên ku di destên me de hene; kurd li quntara çiyayên Zagrosê bi navên "Gûtî", "Lolo", "Kasî", "Mîtanî", "Sobar", "Nayrî", "Manayî", "Kurdok" û "Xaldî" û bi piranî di koçberiyê de jiyane. Paşê di salên 700 heta 550'yê berî zayînê de dewleteke bi hêz a bi navê "Med" damezirandine. Li gorî hin ji dîroknasan, ariyayî di hezareya sêyem a berî zayînê de li başûrê Rûsyayê bi ser bakurê Qefqas û Derya Reş re koçbernî rojavayê Asyayê bûne. Li wir jî ew bûna du beş. Beşek ji wan çûye Ewrûpayê û netewey;ên Ewropayî yên niha paşmaya wê beşê ne. Beşa din jî çûye Rojavaya Navîn û bi maweyeke hezar salî li wir mane. Paşê jî berê xwe dane bakurê Îranê. Piştî demekeê ew beş jî bi xwe bû du deste. Desteyek çû Hîndê û li Pencabê bi cih bû. Gelê Hîndistanê paşmaya wê desteyê ye. Desteya din jî li Îranê belav bû. Wan bi navê "îranî" deng veda. Ew desteya ku li Îranê niştecih bûn û wekî "pars" deng dan. Yên din jî ku her bi awayekî koçber jiyan û li ser çiyayên Zagros û Ararat belav bûn jî, dewleteke bi navê "Med" damezirandin. Faris jî pêş ketin û wan jî dewleteke bi navê "Hexamenişîn" pêk anîn û wan Dewleta Medya di sala 550'yê berî zayînê de têk birin û pûç kirin. Vêca koka farisan diçe ser Hexamenişiyan û ya kurdan jî diçe ser medan.
Civak û Jiyana Kurdan

Kurdistan ji ber ku cihekî çiyayî ye, daristanên wê pir in û heta ku dilê mirov bixwaze tavgeh, çem û rûbarên wê jî hene. Ligel van jî ji bo çandiniyê jî gelekî bikêr e. Ev gişt bûne sedema vê yekê ku kurdberê xwe bidin çandinî û ajledariyê (sewaldariyê) û debara xwe bi vê yekê bikin. Ya ku diyar e, ji ber ajledariyê jiyaneke neteweya kurdan a koçber hebûye û her tim çûne zozanan. Jiyana wan li ser pişta çarsiman bûye û li ku cihekî xweş dîtine li wir danîne û maweyekê li wir mane. Ji sewalên xwe havilên qenc girtine û ji hiriya wan ji xwe re cil û ber, kepenek, gore... û hwd çêkirine. Ji şîrê wan ji xwe re penîr, mas, rûn û hwd. girtine. Bi vî rengîzilamê kurd li kêleka jina xwe li bal sewalên xwe li dengê çûkan û li sîresîra kêzikan û li dengê wezîna bê guhdarî kiriye. Li stêrkan nihêriye. Her wisa xweşikahiya xwezaya Kurdistanê dîtiye. Her karê ku ji destê wan hatiye kirine û hêdî hêdî berhemên xwe ji bo nifşên piştî xwe bi cih hêlane. Ji bo ku jiyaneke neteweya kurdan a ajledarî hebûye, diyar e ku di destpêkê de li çiyayan jiyaye Ji bo xwedîkirina sewalên xwe li rastî gelek kend û kospan hatiye û ji bo parastina sewalên xwe canê xwe avêtiye xetereyê. Li dijî dijmin, neyar û ajalan şer kiriye. Ji ber van sedeman kurd di pile û payeya yekem de netirs (bi xêret), wêrek û dilêr bûye. Her wisa şerker e û di tu şert û mercan de natirse. Piştî ku gelê kurd li deşt û çiyayan bi vî rengî jiyaye, hêdî hêdî li hin cihan stiriye ûniştecih bûye. ligel çandiniyê sewalvanî jî kiriye.l Lewre mijûlî avedaniyê bûye û ligel vê yekê jî f^ğrî xet û nivîsînê bûye. Hêdî hêdî mil bi milê neteweyên din ên ariyayî ji bo pêşxistina çand û wêjeya xwe hewl daye û têkoşiyaye û kemiliye. Mêcersûn ku yek ji rojhilatnasan e, di geştnameya xwe de dibêje: "Kurd zor camêr, wêrek û netirs in, pir ji nêçîr û yariyan hez dikin. Ew dixwazin li deşt û çiyan bijîn. Ji bindestî û koletiyê hez nakin û jê aciz in. Gotina wan yek e. Gelekî cesûr û jêrek in. Zû fêrî ziman, kar û pîşeyan dibin. Gelekî jiax û niştimana xwe hez dikin û xwe li serî didin kuştin. Kurd gelekî bexşende, dilovan, dilêr, camêr, lêbor, mêvandar û mêvanperwer in. dinav kurdan de jin xwedî payeyeke berz in û zilamê kurdan gelekî rêz û hurmetê dide jiyana xwe. Di pêkanîna karekî de jê dipirse,. Jin jî mil bi milê zilaman dixebitin. di cotkirin, ajledarî, maldarî, zarokxwedîkirin û xermanê de mil bmi milê zilamê xwe dixebite. Jina kurd gelek bi namûs û damenpak e ku dawa wê pîs bibe jî wê dikujin. Keç bi dilê xwe dizewice. dildarî reşbelek 8cergûbez: di govendê de destênhevgirtina jin û mêran) di nava kurdan de bi nav û deng e û hemû ji şahî, dawet û govendê hez dikin. Ew vê yekê nîşan didin ku kurd diltêr, rûxweş, bi hiş, zana û wêrek in."
Ayîn û Bawerî di Nav Kurdan de
Wêneka Xiyalî ji Zerdeşt re


Neteweya kurdan di her serdemê de li ser ayîn û baweriyekê bûne. Wekî hemû neteweyên din ên ariyayî di şefeqa dîrokê de baweriya kurdan jî bi Xwedê hebûye û ew perestine. Her wiha bi perestina hîv, roj, stêrk, agir, av, ba, birûsk... û tiştên bi vî rengî mijûl kirine. Wan di destpêkê de laşên miriyên xwe binax nekirine. Wan laşên miriyên xwe danîne ser latekî lûtkeyan da ku laşxwir wan bixwin. Bi vî awayî wan xwestiye ku dîsa bikevin nava laşê giyaneweran. Lê paşê ev rêbaz ji holê rakirine û laşê miriyên xwe pêçane û li çiyayan di bin axê de veşartine. Paşê ji malbata Espîtmanî ya Medyayê kesekî bi navê Zerdeşt peyda bûye û bangî gel kiriye ku Xwedayê tek û teniya biparêzin û baweriyê pê bînin. Gel jî bawerî bi wî aniye û ayîna wî qebûl kiriye. Rêz û rêçikên wî bi kar anîne.

Zerdeşt an Zerdtuştire kurê Pûrûşesp e û ji malbata Spîtme ye. Li gorî gotina Hertsfuld Spîtme yan Sînam malbeteke Medî ye ku li bajarê Rega yan Rey fermanrewayî û desthilatî kiriye. Pîlînûsê mezin jî ku di salên 23-97'ê zayînî de jiyaye dibêje: "Di pirtûka 'Mêjûyî Xorskî" de Zerdeşt wekî 'zerdeştê Medî hatiye binavkirin." Di pirtûka 'Encumenê Arayê Nasirî' de hatiye nivîsandin ku Zerdeşt li qiraxa Goma Şêz ku nêzîkê Tîkantepeya Hawşarê ye, ji dayik bûye. Paşê çûye Çiyayê Sebelanê û li wir ji aliyê Xweda ve bûye pêxember. Paşê çûye bajarê Rey. Ji Rey jî çûye paytextê Luhrasip û Guştasipê û xelkê herêmê aniye ser ayîna xwe. Hin dîroknas jî li ser vê baweriyê ne ku Zerdeşt xelkê herêma Gola Urmuyeyê ye.

Li ser mêjûya jidayikbûna zerdeşt di nava dîroknasan de dîtinên cuda hene. Gelek dîrokzanên Yewnanî yên wekî Erestû, Eflatûn û Îkzan Tûs li ser vê baweriyê ne ku Zerdşt di sala 6500'ê berî zayînê de li nêzîkî Gola Urmuyê ji dayik bûye. Lê hin ji dîrokzanên hevçerx jî ev bawerî û dîtin red kirine û wekî derew zanîne.

Dr. Mihemed Muîn di lêkolîneke li ser dezrdeşt de gihîştiye vê baweriyê ku Zerdeşt di sala 660'ê berî zayînê de goşegîr bûye û di sih saliya xwe de ji aliyê Xwedê ve bûye pêxember. li ser çiyayê sebelanê nêzîkî Gola Urmuyeyê ji wî re siroş û îlham hatiye. Ew di çil û du saliya xwe de ango di sala 6187'an de berî zayînê çûye bajarê belxê û Key Goştasip aniye ser ayîna xwe. Di sala 583'yê berî zayinê de û di temenê heftê û hef saliya xwe de şerek di navbera wan û Ercaspê toran de diqewime û Zerdşt di wî şerî de li ateşkedeya bajarê Belxê hatiye kuştin. Heke ev gotin rast be û Zerdeşt di salên '660-583'yê berî zayînê de jiya be, ew bi du şahê mezin û bi hêzên Medî re maye: Ferwertîş '644-625 berî zayînê' û Huwexşetre '625-585'ê berî zayînê.' Wê çaxê ji bo çi di pirtûka xwe de behsa (dabaşa) bajarê Hegetane û behsa wan nekiriye? Ji ber vê yekê piraniya dîrokzanan dibêjin ku Zerdeşt berî wan jiyaye. Ji bo mînak dalayê Parsî li ser wê baweriyê ye ku Zerdeşt di sala 1000'ê berî zayînê de ji dayik bûye.

Hirtul li ser wê baweriyê ye ku zerdeşt di serdema Wîştasipê Hexamenişî de ji dayik bûye. Liman jî dibêje ku Zerdeşt di serdema Darûşê Hexamenişî de serî hildaye. Wist û Caksin û hin kesên din jî vê yekê rast nabînin. ew ser wê baweriyê ne ku zerdeşt di sala 660-583'yê zayînî de jiyaye. Ev dîrok di pirtûka 'bulnd Hişn' û Ertay Wêrafname'yê û di hin pirtûkên din de jî ku bi zimanê ehlewî hatine nivîsîn de jî heye.

zerdeşt di beşa Gotayan de di beşa zimanvanî keçekya de nivîsiye ku ew ji malbata Spîtme ye û diyar dike ku Spîtme malbateke medî ye. Plînûsê mezin jî zerdeşt wekî zerdeştê medî bi nav kiriye û gelek mêjûnas û lêkolîner jî li ser vê baweriyê ne ku zerdeşt Medî bûye. Vêca di kurdbûn û medîbûna zerdeşt de tu şik û guman namînin.

Piraniya lêkolîner û dîrokzanan dibêjin ku Zerdeşt Avesta bi zimanê xwe yê zikmakî nivîsiye. Avestaya rastîn nameye lê ev Avestaya ku niha di destên zeredeştiyan de heye ji pênc beşan pêk tê ku ew jî ev in: "Yesna", "yeşme", "Wîsperd", "Wendîdad" û "Avestaya Hurik."

Zerdeşt di Avestayê de gel ji bo perestina Xwedayê tek û tenê (Ehûramezda) vedixwîne û bang li gel dike ku bîr û baweriya xwe rast û xurt bikin û karê çandiniyê û ajledariyê bi pêş bixin. Her wiha ji wan dixwaze heta ku ji wan tê zeviyan bikêlin û behreyê (Havilê) jî bigirin. Divê her kes mijûlî karkirin û xebatê bibe û xwe ji tiralî û tembeliyê biparêze.

Zerdeşt di beşa "Windîdad" de lava ji Xwedrê dike û dibêje : "Ey Xwedayê tek û tenê, ey afirînerê erdê, tu yê ji min re bibêjî ku xweştirîn cihê erdê ku der e? Ahûra Mazda bersviv dide: "Ey Zerdeştê Espîtma! Xweştirîn warê erdşê ew der e ku mirovekî parêzgar dixwaze li wir malekê ava bike û agirdanekê 8ateşdanek) tê de çêbike û her wiha xweştirîn cih ew der e ku dewar, pez, jin û zarokên zor tê de hebin û agirekî gur û germ tê de hebe.Xweştirîn cihê erdê ew der e ku rez, bax, baxçe û fêkiyên xelkê li wir hebin û erdê hişk, ziha û bejî nelêlin." zerdeşt ji Ahûra Mazda re dibêje : "Aya xweştirîn cihê din li ku derê ye?" Ahûra Mazda bersivê dide: "Ey Zerdeştê Espîtman, ew cih şûnek e ku çarpiyên zêde lê hebin û zêde bikin û bizên. Ew cihê ku sewalên zêde lê hebin û cihê ku xelk zêde lê çandiniyê dike û sûdeyê (wec) jê digire xweştirîn cih e. Cihê ku çandinî lê neyê kirin wekî jineke xweşik û balaberz û qeşeng e ku ducanî û pêgiran nabe û zarokên wê nabin."

Her wekî ku me got beşeke pirtûka Avestayê bi navê "Gatan" bi awayê helbestî û kîteyî hatiye nivîsîn. ku helbestên wê hemû yên zerdeşt in. Ku va ye zerdeşt yekem helbestvanê kurd e. Ev jî mînakek ji helbestên wî ku dibêje: Yemme xişter awrûh e niwêt ewtem anhe niwît germem niwît zûrû niwît nirtiyuş niwît ereskû dêwe ewdatû

Wate: li padîşayetiya bi nav û deng a Cemî, ne serma bû û ne jî germa. Ne pîrî bû ne merg, ne lewçetî û ne jî rijdiya dîwanê. Piştî ku ola îslamê li Kurdistanê belav bû piraniya neteweya kurdan bawerî pê anî û bûne misilman.
Şûn û Warê Kurdan

Ew şûn û warê ku kurd lê dijîn jê re dibêjin "Kurdistan." di pirtûka "dairetûl Mearifail Îslamî" de tê gotin ku Kurdistan parçe-erdekî biçûk e ku ketiye başûrê Rojhilat. Ew ji Loristanê dest pê dike heta meletî dirêj dibe û die bakurê Rojava.Dr. mihemed Muîn dibêje: "Kurdistan parçe-erdek e ku ketiye Asyaya Rojava û di navbera dewletên Îran, Iraq, Tirkiye, Sûriye û Rûsyayê de hatiye parçekirin. Çiqas ku dilê te bixwaze dewlemend e. Xezîneyên wekî av, newt, sifir 8mis), kogird, cîwe (ciwa) zêde tê de heye. Gotina kurdistan di zimanê Selçûqiyan de bi nav û deng bûye. "Hemdulah mestûfî' ev bajar wekî bajarên Kurdistanê bi êv kirine.: Alanî, elîşter, Behar, Xeftiyan, Derbendî Tacxatûn, Derbendî Zengî, Dibîl, Dînewer, Sultan Avay, Şarezûr, kengwer, Qirmîsîn, Kirind û xoşan, Maydeşt, Hersîn û Westam."

Kurdistan ji bo çandiniyê gelekî bikêr e. Genim, ceh, birinc, genemşa (genimê şamî), nok, nîsk, kuncî û maş jî li wê derê şîn dibin.

Fêkî jî li Kurdistanê çêdibin ku ew jî ev in: Sêv, hinar, encîr, qeysî, gûz, zeytûn, hirmî, alûçe, tirî, sincû û fêkiyên bi vî rengî.

Li Kurdistanê mih, bizin, ga, hesp, hêstir, ker û tiştên wekî wan dijîn.


Hin ji bajarên Kurdistanê ev in:
Bajarên rojhilata Kurdistanê

Sine, Kirmanşah, Pîranşar, Selmas, Sablax, Bokan, Merîwan, Xoy, Şino, Serdeşt, Bane, Bîcar, Tîkantepe, Sayinqela, Urmiye, Xoy, Qurwe, Kirind, Seqiz, Sunqur, Riwanser, Ciwanro, Pawe...
Bajarên başûrê Kurdistanê

Silêmanî, Kerkûk, Hewlêr, Dihok, Akrê, Zaxo, Koye, Kifrî, Rewandiz, Pênciwên, Helebce,Şeqlawe, Diyana, Bedre Mendelî, Xaneqîn ...
Hin bajarên bakurê Kurdistanê

Amed, Bedlîs, Erzirom, Bazîd, Qers, Erzîngan, Dêrsim, Riha, Mûş, Mêrdîn, Elbak, Wan, Agirî, sêrt, Dîlok, Bîngol, Mûş...
Bajarên rojavayê Kurdistanê

Qamişlo, Efrîn... û hwd.

Kurdên Sovyeta pêşî jî bi piranî li bajarê Yêrîvanê dijîn.
Dîrok

Binêrin: Dîroka KurdistanêÇavkanî

Çavkanî

* Minorsky, Vladimir; Kürtler, Koral Yayınları, Stenbol 1992
* Zekî, Mihemed Emîn; Kurd û Kurdistan, Bexda 1931
* Zekî, mihemed Emîn; Dîroka kurdistan, Beybûn, Ankara 1992
* Secadî, Elaedîn; Mêjûyî Edebî Kurd, Bexda 1056
* Nikitin, bazil; Kürtler, Weşanên Deng, Stenbol 1991
* Xemgîn, Etem; Dîroka kurdistan, cild 1, Koln 1992
* Cegerxwîn; Dîroka kurdistan, cild 1, Stockholm 1985

Borekeyî (Sefîzade), Sidîq, Mêjûyî Wêjeyî Kurdî, Tebrîz 1951

* Prof. Katrak; Zimanê Zerdeşt, Tehran 1966
* Rûhanî, baba Merdûx; Tarîxê Meşahîrê Kurd, Tehran 1952
The Kurds (Kurdish: کورد / Kurd) are an Ethnic-Iranian ethnolinguistic group mostly inhabiting a region known as Kurdistan, which includes adjacent parts of Iran, Iraq, Syria, and Turkey. Substantial Kurdish communities also exist in the cities of western Turkey, and they can also be found in Armenia, Georgia, Israel, Azerbaijan, Russia, Lebanon and, in recent decades, some European countries and the United States (see Kurdish diaspora). Most speak Kurdish, an Indo-European language of the Iranian branch. The Kurds are classified as an Iranian people.[16][17][18][19][20][21]
Contents
[hide]

* 1 Language
* 2 Population
* 3 Origins and History
o 3.1 Etymology and usage
o 3.2 Origins
o 3.3 Medieval period
* 4 Kurdish Communities in West Asia
o 4.1 In Iraq
o 4.2 In Turkey
o 4.3 In Iran
o 4.4 In Syria
o 4.5 In Afghanistan
o 4.6 In Armenia
o 4.7 In Azerbaijan
o 4.8 Diaspora
* 5 Religion
o 5.1 Islam
+ 5.1.1 Alevi
o 5.2 Ahl-i Haqq (Yarsan)
o 5.3 Yazidis
o 5.4 Judaism and Christianity
* 6 Culture
* 7 Music
* 8 See also
o 8.1 Modern Kurdish governments
* 9 Notes and references
* 10 Bibliography
* 11 External links

Language
Main article: Kurdish languages

The term Kurdish language (Kurdish: Kurdî or کوردی) is a term used for several Iranian languages spoken by Kurds. It is mainly concentrated in parts of Iran, Iraq, Syria and Turkey.[22] Kurdish is one of two main languages of Iraq.

The Kurdish languages belong to the north-western sub-group of the Iranian languages, which in turn belongs to the Indo-Iranian branch of the Indo-European family. The older Hurrian language of the people inhabiting the Kurdish areas was replaced by Indo-European around 850 BCE, with the arrival of the Medes to Western Iran.[23]

Most Kurds are bilingual or polylingual, speaking the languages of the surrounding peoples such as Arabic, Turkish and Persian as a second language. Kurdish Jews and some Kurdish Christians (not be confused with ethnic Assyrians of Kurdistan) usually speak Aramaic (for example: Lishana Deni) as their first language. Aramaic is a Semitic language related to Hebrew and Arabic rather than Kurdish.

The classification of Kurdish dialects is not an easy task, however the most commonly accepted classification is that of the late Prof. D. N. Mackenzie[24]. According to Mackenzie, there are few linguistic features that all Kurdish dialects have in common and that are not at the same time found in other Iranian languages[25].

The Kurdish dialects according to Mackenzie are classified as[24]:

* Northern group (The Kurmanji dialect group.)
* Central group (Part of the Sorani dialect group)
* Southern group (Part of the Sorani dialect group) including Kermanshahi, Ardalani and Laki language

According to the Encyclopedia Britannica, The Kurdish language has two main groups:[26]

* The Kurmanji dialect group.
* The Sorani dialect group.

and several sub-dialects:

* Kermanshahi/Feyli
* Laki language
* Gorani language

Although specialized sources consider Zaza-Gorani [24][27][28][16] to be separate languages which share a large number of words with Kurdish , the general term Kurd has, nevertheless, historically been used to designate also these groups.

Commenting on the differences between the "dialects" of Kurdish, Kreyenbroek clarifies that in some ways, Kurmanji and Sorani are as different from each other as English and German, giving the example that Kurmanji has grammatical gender and case-endings, but Sorani does not, and observing that referring to Sorani and Kurmanji as "dialects" of one language is supported only by "their common origin...and the fact that this usage reflects the sense of ethnic identity and unity of the Kurds."[29]

According to linguistic experts the two main dialect of Kurdish Kurmanji and Sorani have strong South Western elements in it.[30][31][32]
Population

The number of Kurds living in Southwest Asia is estimated at around 35 million, with another million living in diaspora. Kurds are the fourth largest ethnicity in the Middle East after Arabs, Persians and Turks.

According to the CIA World Factbook, Kurds comprise 20% of the population in Turkey[33], 15-20% in Iraq, perhaps 8% in Syria,[34] 7% in Iran and 1.3% in Armenia. In all of these countries except Iran, Kurds form the second largest ethnic group. Roughly 55% of the world's Kurds live in Turkey, about 18% each in Iran and Iraq, and a bit over 5% in Syria.[35]

McDowall has estimated that in 1991 the Kurds comprised 19% of the population in Turkey, 23% in Iraq, 10% in Iran, and 8% in Syria. The total number of Kurds in 1991 was in this estimate placed at 22.5 million, with 48% of this number living in Turkey, 18% in Iraq, 24% in Iran, and 4% in Syria.[36]
Kurdish costumes, 1873.
Origins and History
Main article: History of the Kurdish people
Kurdish Jews in Rawanduz, 1905
Etymology and usage

The etymology of the term Kurd is not clearly known[37]. Reynolds believes that the term Kurd is most likely related to the ancient term Qardu. The common root of Kurd and Qardu is first mentioned in a Sumerian tablet from the third millennium B.C. as the "land of Kar-da." Qardu is etymologically related to the Assyrian term Urartu and the Hebrew term Ararat[38]. According to Asatrian, the most reasonable explanation of this ethnonym is its possible connections with the Cyrtii (Cyrtaei)[39].

MacDowall: "Certainly by the time of the Islamic conquests a thousand years later, and probably for some time before, the term 'Kurd' had a socio-economic rather than ethnic meaning. It was used of nomads on the western edge of the Iranian plateau and probably also of the tribes that acknowledged the Sassanians in Mesopotamia, many of which must have been Semitic in origin."[40]. Asatrian also concurs with this opinion[41] and takes the term to have a social connotation.

The earliest occurrence of this term in written sources is attested in the form of kurt(kwrt-) in the Middle Persian treatise (Karnamak Ardashir Papakan and the Matadakan i Hazar Dastan), however the term has a distinct social sense rather than particular ethnic sense[42].
Origins
Main articles: Gutian people, Lullubi, Medes, Cyrtii, and Carduchi

Contemporary authors who taken this term for the speaker of modern Kurdish languages have suggested the Lullubi[43], Guti[43], Medes[44], Cyrtians[45], Carduchi[46] and Mards as possible ancestors of the modern Kurdish groups. According to Minorsky there is an "ethno-geographical identification" of present day Kurds as descendent of ancient Medes- an idea based on his "historical, linguistic, and philological" arguments.[47] This was further advanced by I. Gershevitch who provided first "a piece of linguistic confirmation" of Minorsky's identification and then another "sociolinguistic" argument. Those works of Minorsky was the base of yet another and different approach by Mackenzie. He argued that in contrary to Minorsky (and precisely Gershevitch's advancement) the evolution of the present day Kurdish language as a North Western Iranian language was to "lean more toward Persian" and in turn "marked off from Median".[47] These disagreements of scholars caused bitter reactions.[47] Astarian is of the opinion that there is no special genetic affinity between Median and Kurdish[48], Dandamaev consider Carduchi (who were from the upper Tigris near the Assyrian and Median borders) less likely than Cyrtians as ancestors of modern Kurds.[49] However according to McDowall, the term Cyrtii was first applied to Seleucid or Parthian mercenary slingers from Zagros, and it is not clear if it denoted a coherent linguistic or ethnic group[50].The Medes were an Iranian people who overthrew the Assyrians in 612 B.C. and were later absorbed in the Achaemenid empire. The Cyrtians (Greek: Kurtioi, Latin: Cyrtii) is an ancient tribe mentioned to be in Media, Armenia and Persia by Greek geographers such as Strabo. The Carduchi are mentioned by Xenophon and opposed the retreat of the Ten Thousand through the mountains north of Mesopotamia in the 4th century BC. Gershevitch and Fisher consider the independent Kardouchoi or Carduchi as the ancestors of the Kurds, or at least the original nucleus of the Iranian-speaking people in what is now Kurdistan.[46] The Mards or Mardians were, like Cyrtians, ancient tribes native to Zagros mountains; Kurds were traditionally known to Armenians as Mar people. According to M. Van Bruinessen, the Kurds are undoubtedly of heterogeneous origins[51]. The Encyclopedia of Islam also states that there is a complexity of ethnic elements incorporated in them[16]. Gernot Windfur believes that "the majority of those who now speak Kudish most likely were formerly speakers of Median dialects"[52]. There are traces of Kurdified Semitic[16][53][54][55][56], Turkic[57][58][59][60] , Armenian[16][61][62][63][64][65] and possible indigenous Kardu[16][53] origins among Kurdish people.
Medieval period
Kurdish Cavalry in the passes of the Caucasus mountains (The New York Times, January 24, 1915).

In the seventh century, the Arabs possessed the castles and fortifications of the Kurds. The conquest of the cities of Sharazor and Aradbaz took place in 643 CE. In 846 CE, one of the leaders of the Kurds in Mosul revolted against the Caliph Al Mo'tasam who sent the commander Aitakh to combat against him. Aitakh won this war and killed many of the Kurds. The Kurds revolted again in 903 CE, during the period of Almoqtadar. Eventually Arabs conquered the Kurdish regions and gradually converted the majority of Kurds to Islam. In the second half of the tenth century, the Kurdish area was shared among four big Kurdish principalities. In the north were the Shaddadid (951–1174) in parts of present-day Armenia and Arran, and the Rawadid (955–1221) in Tabriz and Maragheh. In the east were the Hasanwayhids (959–1015) and the Annazid (990–1117) in Kermanshah, Dinawar and Khanaqin. In the west were the Marwanid (990–1096) of Diyarbakır. After these, the Ayyubid (1171–1250) of Syria and the Ardalan dynasty (14th century to 1867) were established in present-day Khanaqin, Kirkuk and Sinne.
Kurdish Communities in West Asia
Further information: Kurdistan
In Iraq
Main articles: Iraqi Kurdistan and 1988 Anfal campaign

Kurds make around 17% of Iraq's population. They are the majority in at least three provinces in northern Iraq which are together known as Iraqi Kurdistan. Kurds also have a presence in Kirkuk, Mosul, Khanaqin, and Baghdad. Around 300,000 Kurds live in the Iraqi capital Baghdad, 50,000 in the city of Mosul and around 100,000 elsewhere in southern Iraq.[66]
Kurdish Children in Sulaimaniyah

Kurds led by Mustafa Barzani were engaged in heavy fighting against successive Iraqi regimes from 1960 to 1975. In March 1970, Iraq announced a peace plan providing for Kurdish autonomy. The plan was to be implemented in four years.[67] However, at the same time, the Iraqi regime started an Arabization program in the oil-rich regions of Kirkuk and Khanaqin.[68] The peace agreement did not last long, and in 1974, the Iraqi government began a new offensive against the Kurds. Moreover in March 1975, Iraq and Iran signed the Algiers Accord, according to which Iran cut supplies to Iraqi Kurds. Iraq started another wave of Arabization by moving Arabs to the oil fields in Kurdistan, particularly those around Kirkuk.[69] Between 1975 and 1978, 200,000 Kurds were deported to other parts of Iraq.[70]

During the Iran-Iraq War in the 1980s, the regime implemented anti-Kurdish policies and a de facto civil war broke out. Iraq was widely condemned by the international community, but was never seriously punished for oppressive measures such as the mass murder of hundreds of thousands of civilians, the wholesale destruction of thousands of villages and the deportation of thousands of Kurds to southern and central Iraq. The campaign of Iraqi government against Kurds in 1988 was called Anfal ("Spoils of War"). The Anfal attacks led to destruction of two thousand villages and death of 50,000 to 100,000 Kurds.[71]
The President of Iraq, Jalal Talabani, meeting with U.S. officials in Baghdad, Iraq, on April 26, 2006.

After the collapse of the Kurdish uprising in March 1991, Iraqi troops recaptured most of the Kurdish areas and 1.5 million Kurds abandoned their homes and fled to the Turkish and Iranian borders. It is estimated that close to 20,000 Kurds succumbed to death due to exhaustion, lack of food, exposure to cold and disease. On 5 April 1991, UN Security Council passed resolution 688 which condemned the repression of Iraqi Kurdish civilians and demanded that Iraq end its repressive measures and allow immediate access to international humanitarian organizations[72]. This was the first international document (since the League of Nations arbitration of Mosul in 1926) to mention Kurds by name. In mid-April, the Coalition established safe havens inside Iraqi borders and prohibited Iraqi planes from flying north of 36th parallel[73]. In October 1991, Kurdish guerrillas captured Erbil and Sulaimaniyah after a series of clashes with Iraqi troops. In late October, Iraqi government retaliated by imposing a food and fuel embargo on the Kurds and stopping to pay civil servants in the Kurdish region. The embargo, however, backfired and Kurds held parliamentary elections in May 1992 and established Kurdistan Regional Government[74].

The Kurdish population welcomed the American troops in 2003 by holding celebrations and dancing in the streets.[75][76][77][78] The area controlled by peshmerga was expanded, and Kurds now have effective control in Kirkuk and parts of Mosul. The authority of the KRG and legality of its laws and regulations were recognized in the articles 113 and 137 of the new Iraqi Constitution ratified in 2005[79]. By the beginning of 2006, the two Kurdish administrations of Erbil and Sulaimaniya were unified.
In Turkey
Main articles: Kurds in Turkey, Turkish Kurdistan, Human rights in Turkey, and Kurdistan Workers Party

According to CIA Factbook, Kurds formed approximately 18% of the population in Turkey (approximately 14 million) in 2008.[2] In 1980, Ethnologue estimated the number of Kurdish-speakers in Turkey at around five million,[80] when the country's population stood at 44 million.[81] Kurds form the largest minority group in Turkey, and they have posed the most serious and persistent challenge to the official image of a homogeneous society. During the 1930s and 1940s, the government had disguised the presence of the Kurds statistically by categorizing them as Mountain Turks. This classification was changed to the new euphemism of Eastern Turk in 1980.[82]

Several large scale Kurdish revolts in 1925, 1930 and 1938 were suppressed by the Turkish government and more than one million Kurds were forcibly relocated between 1925 and 1938. The use of Kurdish language, dress, folklore, and names were banned and the Kurdish-inhabited areas remained under martial law until 1946.[83] The Ararat revolt, which reached its apex in 1930, was only suppressed after a massive military campaign including destruction of many villages and their populations. In quelling the revolt, Turkey was assisted by the close cooperation of its neighboring states such as Soviet Union, Iran and Iraq[84]. The revolt was organized by a Kurdish party called Khoybun which signed a treaty with the Dashnaksutyun (Armenian Revolutionary Federation) in 1927.[84] By 1970s, Kurdish leftist organizations such as Kurdistan Socialist Party-Turkey (KSP-T) emerged in Turkey which were against violence and supported civil activities and participation in elections. In 1977, Mehdi Zana a supporter of KSP-T won the mayoralty of Diyarbakir in the local elections. At about the same time, generational fissures gave birth to two new organizations: the National Liberation of Kurdistan and the Kurdistan Workers Party.[85]
Kurdish boys, Diyarbakir.

The Partiya Karkerên Kurdistan (PKK), also known as KADEK and Kongra-Gel, is considered by the US, the EU, and NATO to be a terrorist organization.[86] It is an ethnic secessionist organization using violence for the purpose of achieving its goal of creating an independent Kurdish state in parts of southeastern Turkey, northeastern Iraq, northeastern Syria and northwestern Iran.

Between 1984 and 1999, the PKK and the Turkish military engaged in open war, and much of the countryside in the southeast was depopulated, as Kurdish civilians moved to local defensible centers such as Diyarbakır, Van, and Şırnak, as well as to the cities of western Turkey and even to western Europe. The causes of the depopulation included PKK atrocities against Kurdish clans they could not control, the poverty of the southeast, and the Turkish state's military operations.[87]
Leyla Zana

Leyla Zana, the first Kurdish female MP from Diyarbakir, caused an uproar in Turkish Parliament after adding the following sentence in Kurdish to her parliamentary oath during the swearing-in ceremony in 1994:

I take this oath for the brotherhood of the Turkish and Kurdish peoples.[88]

In March 1994, the Turkish Parliament voted to lift the immunity of Zana and five other Kurdish DEP members: Hatip Dicle, Amet Turk, Sirri Sakik, Orhan Dogan and Selim Sadak. Zana, Dicle, Sadak and Dogan were sentenced to 15 years in jail by the Supreme Court in October 1995. Zana was awarded the Sakharov Prize for human rights by the European Parliament in 1995. She was released in 2004 amid warnings from European institutions that the continued imprisonment of the four Kurdish MPs would affect Turkey's bid to join the EU[89][90].

Officially protected death squads are accused of disappearance of 3,200 Kurds in 1993 and 1994 in the so called mystery killings. Kurdish politicians, human-rights activists, journalists, teachers and other members of intelligentsia were among the victims. Virtually none of the perpetrators were investigated nor punished. Turkish government also encouraged an Islamic extremist group called Hezbollah to assassinate suspected PKK members and often ordinary Kurds.[91] Azimet Köylüoğlu, the state minister of human rights, revealed the extent of security forces' excesses in autumn 1994: While acts of terrorism in other regions are done by the PKK; in Tunceli it is state terrorism. In Tunceli, it is the state that is evacuating and burning villages. In the southeast there are two million people left homeless.[92]
In Iran
a view of Sanandaj, a major city in Iranian Kurdistan.
Main articles: Iranian Kurdistan and History of the Kurds

The Kurdish part of Iran has been a part of this country from historical times. The Kurds constitute today approximately 7% of Iran's overall population. The Persians, Kurds, and speakers of other Indo-European languages in Iran are descendants of the Aryan tribes that began migrating from Central Asia into what is now Iran in the 2nd millennium BCE.[93] According to some sources, "some Kurds in Iran have resisted the Iranian government's efforts, both before and after the revolution of 1979, to assimilate them into the mainstream of national life and, along with their fellow Kurds in adjacent regions of Iraq and Turkey, has sought either regional autonomy or the outright establishment of an independent Kurdish state".[93] While other sources state that "most of the freedoms Turkish Kurds have been eager to spill blood over have been available in Iran for years; Iran constitutionally recognizes the Kurds' language and minority ethnic status, and there is no taboo against speaking Kurdish in public." .[94]

In the 17th century, a large number of Kurds were settled by Shah Abbas I to Khorasan in Eastern Iran and resettled in the cities of Northern Khorasan province (Quchan, Bojnurd, Shirvan, DareGaz, and Esfaraeen) to defend Iran's frontier against Uzbeks. Others migrated to Afghanistan where they took refuge.[95] The Kurds of Khorasan, numbering around 700,000, still use the Kurmanji Kurdish dialect.[13][96] During the 19th and 20th centuries, successive Iranian governments crushed Kurdish revolts led by Kurdish notables such as Shaikh Ubaidullah (against Qajars in 1880) and Simko (against Pahlavis in the 1920s).[97]

In January 1946, during the Soviet occupation of north-western Iran, the Soviet-backed Kurdish Republic of Mahabad declared independence in parts of Iranian Kurdistan. Nevertheless, the Soviet forces left Iran in May 1946, and the self-declared republic fell to the Iranian army after only a few months and the president of the republic Qazi Muhammad was hanged publicly in Mahabad. After the 1953 Iranian coup d'état, Mohammad Reza Pahlavi became more autocratic and suppressed most opposition including Kurdish political groups seeking greater rights for Iranian Kurds. He also prohibited any teaching of the Kurdish language.[97]

After the Iranian revolution, intense fighting occurred between militant Kurdish groups and the Islamic Republic between 1979 and 1982. In August 1979, Ruhollah Khomeini declared a "holy war" against the Kurdish rebels seeking autonomy or independence, and ordered the Armed Forces to move to the Kurdish areas of Iran in order to push the Kurdish rebels out and restore central rule to the country.[98] A picture of a firing squad of Revolutionary Guards executing Kurdish prisoners around Sanandaj gained international fame and won the Pulitzer Prize in 1980[99][100]. The Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps fought to reestablish government control in the Kurdish regions, as a result around ten thousand Kurds were killed[97]. Since 1983, the Iranian government has maintained control over the Iranian Kurdistan.[101] Frequent unrest and the occasional military crackdown have occurred since the 1990s.[102]

In Iran, Kurds express their cultural identity freely, but have no self-government or administration. As in all parts of Iran, membership of a non-governmental political party is punishable by imprisonment or even death. Kurdish human rights activists in Iran have been threatened by Iranian authorities.[103][104] Following the killing of Kurdish opposition activist Shivan Qaderi and two other Kurdish men by Iranian security forces in Mahabad on July 9, 2005, six weeks of riots and protests erupted in Kurdish towns and villages throughout eastern Kurdistan. Scores were killed and injured, and an untold number arrested without charge. The Iranian authorities have also shut down several major Kurdish newspapers and arrested editors and reporters. Among those was Roya Toloui, a Women's rights activist and head of the Rasan ("Rising") newspaper in Sanandaj, who was alleged to be tortured for two months for involvement in the organization of peaceful protests throughout Kurdistan province.[105] According to an Iran analyst at International Crisis Group, "Kurds, who live in the some of the least developed parts of Iran, pose the most serious internal problem for Iran to resolve, and given what they see next door--the newfound confidence of Iraqi Kurds--there's concern Iranian Kurds will agitate for greater autonomy."[106]
In Syria
Main article: Kurds in Syria
statue of Saladin near the Citadel of Damascus

Kurds account for 9% of Syria's population, a total of around 1.6 million people.[107] This makes them the largest ethnic minority in the country. They are mostly concentrated in the northeast and the north, but there are also significant Kurdish populations in Aleppo and Damascus. Kurds often speak Kurdish in public, unless all those present do not. Kurdish human rights activists are mistreated and persecuted.[108] No political parties are allowed for any group, Kurdish or otherwise.

Techniques used to suppress the ethnic identity of Kurds in Syria include various bans on the use of the Kurdish language, refusal to register children with Kurdish names, the replacement of Kurdish place names with new names in Arabic, the prohibition of businesses that do not have Arabic names, the prohibition of Kurdish private schools, and the prohibition of books and other materials written in Kurdish.[109][110] Having been denied the right to Syrian nationality, around three-hundred thousand Kurds have been deprived of any social rights, in violation of international law.[111][112] As a consequence, these Kurds are in effect trapped within Syria.[109] In February 2006, however, sources reported that Syria was now planning to grant these Kurds citizenship.[112]

On March 12, 2004, beginning at a stadium in Qamishli (a largely Kurdish city in northeastern Syria), clashes between Kurds and Syrians broke out and continued over a number of days. At least thirty people were killed and more than 160 injured. The unrest spread to other Kurdish towns along the northern border with Turkey, and then to Damascus and Aleppo.[113][114]
In Afghanistan

Kurds had been living in regions bordering modern day Afghanistan since the 1500s notably in north eastern Iran where the Safavid ruler Shah Abbas exiled thousands of Kurds.[115] Many of those who were exiled ultimately made their way into Afghanistan, taking residence in Herat and other cities of western Afghanistan. The Kurdish colony in Afghanistan numbered some tens of thousands during the 16th century.[95] Some Kurds held high governmental positions within Afghanistan, such as Ali Mardan Khan who was appointed the governor of Kabul in 1641.[116] The Kurds devotedly sided with the Afghans during their conflicts with the Safavid Empire, and in their subsequent conflicts with other regional powers.[117] The number of Kurds currently in Afghanistan is difficult to calculate, though one figure notes that there are approximately 200,000.[11] The extent to which the Kurds in Afghanistan have retained the Kurdish language remains unclear.
In Armenia
See also: Kurdish-Armenian relations

At the behest of the Turks, some Kurds actively participated in the massacre of tens of thousands of Armenians during the Armenian genocide[118]. Between the 1930s and 1980s, Armenia was a part of the Soviet Union, within which Kurds, like other ethnic groups, had the status of a protected minority. Armenian Kurds were permitted their own state-sponsored newspaper, radio broadcasts and cultural events. During the conflict in Nagorno-Karabakh, many non-Yazidi Kurds were forced to leave their homes since both the Azeri and non-Yazidi Kurds were Muslim.
In Azerbaijan
Main article: Kurds in Azerbaijan

In 1920, two Kurdish-inhabited areas of Jewanshir (capital Kalbajar) and eastern Zangazur (capital Lachin) were combined to form the Kurdistan Okrug (or "Red Kurdistan"). The period of existence of the Kurdish administrative unit was brief and did not last beyond 1929. Kurds subsequently faced many repressive measures, including deportations, imposed by the Soviet government. As a result of the conflict in Nagorno-Karabakh, many Kurdish areas have been destroyed and more than 150,000 Kurds have been deported since 1988 by separatist Armenian forces.[119]
Diaspora
Feleknas Uca, MEP from Germany.

According to a report by the Council of Europe, approximately 1.3 million Kurds live in Western Europe. The earliest immigrants were Kurds from Turkey, who settled in Germany, Austria, the Benelux countries, Great Britain, Switzerland and France during the 1960s. Successive periods of political and social turmoil in the Middle East during 1980s and 1990s brought new waves of Kurdish refugees, mostly from Iran and Iraq under Saddam Hussein, came to Europe.[13] In recent years, many Kurdish asylum seekers from both Iran and Iraq have settled in the United Kingdom (especially in the town of Dewsbury and in some northern areas of London), which has sometimes caused media controversy over their right to remain.[120] There have been tensions between Kurds and the established Muslim community in Dewsbury,[121][122] which is home to very traditional mosques such as the Markazi.

There was substantial immigration of Kurds into North America, who are mainly political refugees and immigrants seeking economic opportunity. An estimated 100,000 Kurds are known to live in the United States, with 50,000 in Canada and less than 15,000 in Australia.[citation needed]
Religion
Main articles: Islam, Yazidism, Yarsan, Alevi, Kurdish Jews, and Kurdish Christians
A mosque in Arbil.
Islam

Today, the majority of Kurds are Sunni Muslim, belonging to the Shafi school. Mystical practices and participation in Sufi orders are also widespread among Kurds.[123] There is also a minority of Kurds who are Shia Muslims, primarily living in the Ilam and Kermanshah provinces of Iran, Central and south eastern Iraq (Fayli Kurds), and who are Alevi, who mostly live in Turkey.
Alevi

The Alevis (usually considered adharents of a branch of Shia Islam) are another religious minority among the Kurds. They are mainly living in Tunceli, Erzincan, eastern Sivas, northern and southern Malatya, eastern and northwestern Kahramanmaraş, northern Adana, western Kayseri, central and western Adıyaman, northeastern Gaziantep, northern Elazığ, southwestern Erzurum, northern Bingöl, northwestern Muş and various other areas in Anatolia. The American missionary Trowbridge, working at Aintab (present Gaziantep) reported that his Alevi acquaintances considered as their highest spiritual leaders an Ahl-i Haqq sayyid family in the Guran district[124].
Ahl-i Haqq (Yarsan)

Ahl-i Haqq's basic pillars are summarized this verse of Gurani:

"Yāri Chār Chivan Bāvari Vajā- Pāki o Rāsti o Nisti o Redā"

which translates roughly to:

The Yarsan should strive for these four qualities

purity, rectitude, self-effacement and self-abnegation[125].

Among its belief include the principle of successive lives of human souls where each soul is allotted a time of 50 thousand years to reach its perfection (the stage of Death within God). If that soul does not reach its perfection, then it is judged by its deed after its 50 thousand years. Another belief of the Yarsan is the and repeated manifestation of the light of the divine essence, the archangels and a class of saviours (Haftwan, Haft Sardar-i Din, Chehel Tan, Haftad o Do Pir..) in human form.

The founder of the religion, Sultan Sahak appeared among the Guran in mid or late 15th century, and is considered by them as the last great manifestation of the divine essence. Yarsan followers also recognize Ali as one of their divine incarnations, although he is surpassed in importance by Sultan Sahak. The Sultan Sahak is accompanied by seven companions who are the manifestation of the seven primordial archangels (haft tan or heptad).

Binyamin (the pir or spiritual master) is the manifestation of the light Gabriel, while Dawud (the Dalil or Guide) is the manifestation of Mikail or Raphael[126].

There are strong similarities between religious practices and myths of Ahl-i Haqq and Alevi. According to one Ahl-i Haqq legend, after Sultan Sahak had completed his teachings among the Guran, he reappeared in Anatolia in the form of Haji Bektash. Moreover, the Ahl-i Haqq consider the Bektashi and Alevi as kindred communities[124].
Yazidis

Yazidi is a minority religion practiced among Kurdish communities of northern Iraq, Armenia, Georgia and Russia. According to Yazidi beliefs, although God created the world but left it in the care of a heptad of seven holy beings or angels. The most prominent angel is Tawûsê Melek (Malak Taus) or the Peacock Angel. One of their holy texts Kiteba Jelwa(Book of Illumination) is considered to be the words of Malak Taus. Yazidi accounts of creation have much in common with those of the Ahl-e Haqq. Yazidis believe in the periodic reincarnation of the seven holy beings in human form. Their holiest shrine and the tomb of faith's founder (Shaikh Adi bin Mosafer), is located in Lalish (36 miles northeast of Mosul) in northern Iraq[127].
Judaism and Christianity
Main articles: Kurdish Christians and Kurdish Jews
sample of an Ayyubid coin with a Star of David

Christianity and Judaism both are still practised in very small numbers.[128] Rabbi Asenath Barzani, who lived in Mosul from 1590 to 1670, was among the very first Jewish women to become a rabbi. The overwhelming majority of the Kurdish Jews had immigrated to the Jewish State, Israel, during the early 1950s. For centuries, the Jews had lived as protected subjects of the tribal chieftains (aghas) and survived in the urban centers and villages in which they lived. In return for the protection granted by their aghas, the Jews would occasionally give them gifts, services and commissions of their commercial and agricultural transactions.[129]
Culture
Main articles: Kurdish culture, Kurdish literature, and Kurdish women
Kurdish dance

Kurdish culture is a legacy from the various ancient peoples who shaped modern Kurds and their society, but primarily of three layers of indigenous (Hurrian), ancient Iranian, and Islamic roots. Kurdish culture is close to that of other Iranian peoples. Kurds, for instance, also celebrate Newroz (March 21) as New Year's Day.[130] Kurdish films mainly evoke poverty and the lack of rights of Kurdish people in the region. Yılmaz Güney (Yol [131]) and Bahman Qubadi (A Time for Drunken Horses, Turtles Can Fly) are among the better-known Kurdish directors.

In contrast to many neighboring Muslim populations, Kurdish women are not secluded and do not wear the veil. Kurdish men and women participate in mixed-gender dancing during feasts, weddings and other social celebrations. Major Soane, a British colonial officer during WWI, noted that this is unusual among Islamic people and pointed out that in this respect Kurdish culture is more akin to that of eastern Europe than to Middle East[132].
Music
Main article: Kurdish music

Traditionally, there are three types of Kurdish Classical performers: storytellers (çîrokbêj), minstrels (stranbêj), and bards (dengbêj). No specific music was associated with the Kurdish princely courts. Instead, music performed in night gatherings (şevbihêrk) is considered classical. Several musical forms are found in this genre. Many songs are epic in nature, such as the popular Lawiks, heroic ballads recounting the tales of Kurdish heroes such as Saladin. Heyrans are love ballads usually expressing the melancholy of separation and unfulfilled love, while Lawje is a form of religious music and Payizoks are songs performed during the autumn. Love songs, dance music, wedding and other celebratory songs (dîlok/narînk), erotic poetry, and work songs are also popular.
This article is part of the
Kurdish history and Culture series
Early ancestors

* Land of Karda
* Gutium
* Mitanni
* Mannaeans
* Matiene
* Median

Ancient history

* Corduene
* Kayusid

Medieval history

* Sharazor
* Shaddadid
* Rawadid
* Hasanwayhid
* Annazid
* Marwanid
* Hadhabani
* Hazaraspid
* Ayyubid
* Badlis
* Ardalan
* Badinan
* Soran
* Mukriyan
* Baban

Modern history

* Simko Shikak
* Kingdom of Kurdistan
* Republic of Ararat
* Republic of Mahabad
* KRG
* Iranian Kurdistan
* Turkish Kurdistan
* Kurds in Turkey
* Kurds in Syria

Culture

* Kurdish Literature
* Kurdish Music
* Kurdish Dance
* Historical sites

See also

* Kurdistan
* History of the Kurdish people
* Ottoman Empire
* Turkish Kurdistan
* Kurds in Turkey
* Iranian Kurdistan
* Iraqi Kurdistan
* Kurds in Syria
* Kurdistan Okrug
* List of Kurdish people
* Kurdish organisations
* Origins of the Kurds
* Yazidis
* Kurdish Jews
* Kurdish Christians
* Kurdish American

Modern Kurdish governments

* Kingdom of Kurdistan 1920
* Republic of Ararat 1927–1930
* Republic of Mahabad 1946
* Kurdistan Regional Government (KRG) (1991 to date)

Notes and references

1. ^ Konda Poll gives a figure of about 11.4 million
2. ^ a b CIA World Factbook gives about 14 million (18% Kurds out of 72.5 million total population) (2008 est.)
3. ^ Turkish National Security Council gives about 12.6 million (2008)
4. ^ Juvenile Nonfiction, “ The Handbook of Middle East ”, Publisher: 21st Century, 2002. pg 144:”About 20 percent of Turkey ’s population is Kurdish.”
5. ^ Kemal Kirisci, Gareth M. Winrow, “The Kurdish Question and Turkey ”, Routledge, 1997. pg 119: “According to Turgut Ozal there were 12 million Kurds in Turkey . .. Van Bruinessen has argued that a ‘reasonable and even conservative’ estimate for the size of Kurdish population in 1975 was 7.5 millions, which amounts to 19 percent of the population”
6. ^ Sandra Mackey , “The reckoning: Iraq and the legacy of Saddam”, W.W. Norton and Company, 2002. Excerpt from pg 350: “As much as 25% of Turkey is Kurdish.”
7. ^ a b c “Beverley Milton-Edwards, “Contemporary politics in the Middle East” Polity, 2006. pg 231: “They form a population in all four states, making 23 percent in Turkey, 23 percent in Iraq, 10 percent in Iran and 8 percent in Syria (Mcdowell, 2003, p 3-4).”
8. ^ Estimate based on 7% of 68,688,433: World Factbook, s.v. Iran;
9. ^ Estimate based on 15% to 20% of 26,783,383: World Factbook, s.v. Iraq; Encyclopedia of the Orient, s.v. Iraq: Religions and Peoples.
10. ^ http://www.state.gov/r/pa/ei/bgn/3580.htm
11. ^ a b c d e The Kurdish Diaspora, Institut Kurde de Paris (Paris: Institut Kurde de Paris, 2006), http://www.institutkurde.org/en/kurdorama/.
12. ^ Lokman I. Meho, The Kurds and Kurdistan: A General Background, in Kurdish Culture and Society: An Annotated Bibliography. Comp. Lokman I. Meho & Kelly Maglaughlin (Westport, CT: Greenwood Press, 2001), p. 4, viewable on Google Books
13. ^ a b c d The cultural situation of the Kurds, A report by Lord Russell-Johnston, Council of Europe, July 2006.
14. ^ Kurdiska Riksförbundet i Sverige
15. ^ Kurds in the UK, BBC News 9 December 2008
16. ^ a b c d e f Bois, Th.; Minorsky, V.; Bois, Th.; Bois, Th.; MacKenzie, D.N.; Bois, Th. "Kurds, Kurdistan." Encyclopaedia of Islam. Edited by: P. Bearman , Th. Bianquis , C.E. Bosworth , E. van Donzel and W.P. Heinrichs. Brill, 2009. Brill Online. Excerpt 1:"The Kurds, an Iranian people of the Near East, live at the junction of more or less laicised Turkey"..Excerpt 2: "The classification of the Kurds among the Iranian nations is based mainly on linguistic and historical data and does not prejudice the fact there is a complexity of ethnical elements incorporated in them" Excerpt 3:"We thus find that about the period of the Arab conquest a single ethnic term Kurd (plur. Akrād ) was beginning to be applied to an amalgamation of Iranian or iranicised tribes. Among the latter, some were autochthonous (the Ḳardū; the Tmorik̲h̲/Ṭamurāyē in the district of which Alḳī = Elk was the capital; the Χοθα̑ίται [= al-Ḵh̲uwayt̲h̲iyya] in the canton of Ḵh̲oyt of Sāsūn, the Orṭāyē [= al-Arṭān] in the bend of the Euphrates); some were Semites (cf. the popular genealogies of the Kurd tribes) and some probably Armenian (it is said that the Mamakān tribe is of Mamikonian origin). " Excerpt 4: "In the 20th century, the existence of an Iranian non-Kurdish element among the Kurds has been definitely established (the Gūrān-Zāzā group)."
17. ^ G. Asatrian, Prolegomena to the Study of the Kurds, Iran and the Caucasus, Vol.13, pp.1-58, 2009: "The ancient history of the Kurds, as in case of many other Iranian ethnic groups (Baluchis, etc.), can be reconstructed but in a very tentative and abstract form"
18. ^ Michael G. Morony, "Iraq After the Muslim Conquest", Gorgias Press LLC, 2005. pg 265: "Kurds were only small ethnic group native to Iraq. As with the Persians, their presence along the northeastern edge of Iraq was merely an extension of their presence in Western Iran. All of the non-Persian, tribal, pastoral, Iranian groups in the foothills and the mountains of the Zagros range along the eastern fringes of Iraq were called Kurd at that time
19. ^ E. J. van Donzel, "Islamic desk reference ", BRILL, 1994. ISBN-9004097384. pg 222: "Kurds/Kurdistan: the Kurds are an Iranian people who live mainly at the junction of more or less laicised Turkey, Shi'i Iran Arab Sunni Iraq and North Syria and the former Soviet Transcaucasia. Several dynasties, such as the Marwanids of Diyarbakir, the Ayyubids, the Shaddadis and possibly the Safawids, as well as prominent personalities, were of Kurdish origin
20. ^ RUSSELL, JR 1990 « Pre-Christian Armenian Religion*, dans Aufstieg und Nieder- gang der Romischen Welt, II, 18.4, p. 2679-2692, Berlin-New York, 1990., pg 2691: "A study of the pre-Islamic religion of the Kurds, an Iranian people who inhabited southern parts of Armenia from ancient times to present, has yet to be written"[1]
21. ^ John Limbert, The Origins and Appearance of the Kurds in Pre-Islamic Iran, Iranian Studies, Vol.1, No.2, Spring 1968, pp.41-51. p.41: "In these last areas, the historic road from Baghdad to Hamadan and beyond divides the Kurds from their Iranian cousins, the Lurs."
22. ^ Geographic distribution of Kurdish and other Iranic languages
23. ^ The correlation Between Languages and Genes: The Usko-Mediterranean Peoples, Human Immunology, vol. 62, p.1057, 2001
24. ^ a b c G. Asatrian, Prolegomena to the Study of the Kurds, Iran and the Caucasus, Vol.13, pp.1-58, 2009: "The classification of the Kurdish dialects is not an easy task, despite the fact that there have been numerous attempts mostly by Kurdish authors to put them into a system. However, for the time being the commonly accepted classification of the Kurdish dialects is that of the late Prof. D. N. Mackenzie, the author of fundamental works in Kurdish dialectology (see Mackenzie 1961; idem 1961-1962; idem 1963a; idem 1981), who distinguished three groups of dialects: Northern, Central, and Southern."
25. ^ "Kurdish Nationalism and Competing Ethnic Loyalties", Original English version of: "Nationalisme kurde et ethnicités intra-kurdes", Peuples Méditerranéens no. 68-69 (1994), 11-37. Excerpt: "This view was criticised by the linguist D.N. MacKenzie, according to whom there are but few linguistic features that all Kurdish dialects have in common and that are not at the same time found in other Iranian languages."
26. ^ Kurdish language. Encyclopædia Britannica.
27. ^ Philip G. Kreyenbroek, Stefan Sperl, "The Kurds", Published by Routledge, 1992.
28. ^ McKenzie, D. N. (1961) ‘The origins of Kurdish’, in Transactions of the Philological Society: 68 - 86.
29. ^ Kreyenbroek, Philip (1992). "On the Kurdish Language", in The Kurds: a contemporary overview, eds. Philip Kreyenbroek and Stefan Sperl (p. 69).
30. ^ Professor Garnik Asatrian (Yerevan University) (2009). Published in 2009, Iran and the Caucasus, 13, pp.1-58.
31. ^ Who are the ZAZA
32. ^ Ludwig Pau. (2008). KURDISH LANGUAGE i. HISTORY OF THE KURDISH LANGUAGE
33. ^ The CIA Factbook updated sources give Kurds comprise 20% of the population in Turkey.
34. ^ The CIA Factbook reports all non-Arabs make up 9.7% of the Syrian population, and does not break out the Kurdish figure separately. Since Syria contains a large Armenian population, 8% may be a reasonable percentage.
35. ^ CIA: The World Factbook
36. ^ Amir Hassanpour, "A Stateless Nation's Quest for Sovereignty in the Sky", Paper presented at the Freie Universitat Berlin, 7 November 1995.
37. ^ G. Asatrian, Prolegomena to the Study of the Kurds, Iran and the Caucasus, Vol.13, pp.1-58, 2009: "Generally, the etymons and primary meanings of tribal names or ethnonyms, as well as place names, are often irrecoverable; Kurd is also an obscurity"
38. ^ G. S. Reynolds, A Reflection on Two Qurʾānic Words (Iblīs and Jūdī), with Attention to the Theories of A. Mingana, Journal of the American Oriental Society, Vol. 124, No. 4 (Oct. - Dec., 2004), pp. 675-689. (see p.683, 684 & 687)
39. ^ G. Asatrian, Prolegomena to the Study of the Kurds, Iran and the Caucasus, Vol.13, pp.1-58, 2009: "Evidently, the most reasonable explanation of this ethnonym must be sought for in its possible connections with the Cyrtii (Cyrtaei) of the Classical authors."
40. ^ McDowall, David. 2000. A modern history of the Kurds. London: I.B. Tauris. p9
41. ^ G. Asatrian, Prolegomena to the Study of the Kurds, Iran and the Caucasus, Vol.13, pp.1-58, 2009
42. ^ G. Asatrian, Prolegomena to the Study of the Kurds, Iran and the Caucasus, Vol.13, pp.1-58, 2009. p23: "It is clear that kurt in all the contexts has a distinct social sense, “nomad, tent-dweller”. It could equally be an attribute for any Iranian ethnic group having similar characteristics. To look for a particular ethnic sense here would be a futile exercise." pg 24: "The Pahlavi materials clearly show that kurd in pre-Islamic Iran was a social label, still a long way off from becoming an ethnonym or a term denoting a distinct group of people."
43. ^ a b Thomas Bois, The Kurds, 159 pp., 1966. (see p.10)
44. ^ John Limbert, The Origins and Appearance of the Kurds in Pre-Islamic Iran, Iranian Studies, Vol. 1, No. 2, Spring 1968
45. ^ Encyclopedia Iranica, "Carduchi" by M. Dandamayev
46. ^ a b Ilya Gershevitch, William Bayne Fisher, The Cambridge History of Iran: The Median and Achamenian Periods, 964 pp., Cambridge University Press, 1985, ISBN 0521200911, 9780521200912, (see footnote of p.257)
47. ^ a b c Antonio Panaino, Sara Circassia, ed (2006). The scholarly contribution of Ilya Gershevitch to the development of Iranian studies: International Seminar, 11th April 2003, Ravenna (Simorg Series ed.). Mimesis Edizioni. ISBN 8884833140. See page 71-2.
48. ^ G. Asatrian, Prolegomena to the Study of the Kurds, Iran and the Caucasus, Vol.13, pp.1-58, 2009. (p.21)
49. ^ Encyclopedia Iranica, "Carduchi" by M. Dandamayev Excerpt: "It has repeatedly been argued that the Carduchi were the ancestors of the Kurds, but the Cyrtii (Kurtioi) mentioned by Polybius, Livy, and Strabo (see MacKenzie, pp. 68-69) are more likely candidates."
50. ^ David McDowall, A modern history of the Kurds, 515 pp., I.B.Tauris, 2004, ISBN 1850434166, 9781850434160 (see p.9)
51. ^ M. Van Bruinessen, Agha, Shaikh and State, 373 pp., Zed Books, 1992. p.122:"The Kurds are undoubtedly of heterogeneous origins. Many people lived in what is now Kurdistan during the past millennia and almost all of the them have disappeared as ethnic or linguistic groups.", p.117:"It is certainly not true that all tribes in Kurdistan have a common origin."
52. ^ Windfuhr, Gernot. "Isoglosses: A Sketch on Persians and Parthians, Kurds and Medes" in Hommages et Opera Minora, Monumentum H. S. Nyberg, Vol. 2., Acta Iranica 5. Tehran-Liège: Bibliothèque Pahlavi, 457-472. pg 468. excerpt:"One may add that the overlay of a strong superstrate by a dialect from the eastern parts of Iran does not imply the conclusion that ethnically all Kurdish speakers are from the east, just as one would hesitate to identify the majority of Azarbayjani speakers as ethnic Turks. The majority of those who now speak Kurdish most likely were formerly speakers of Median dialects"
53. ^ a b P.G. Kreyenbroek, S. Sperl, The Kurds: a contemporary overview, 272 pp., Routledge Publishers, 1991. p.11:"By the time of the Arab Muslim conquests of the seventh century AD, the ethnic term Kurd was being applied to an amalgam of Iranian and Iranicized tribes, some of which may have been indigenous Kardu, but many of which were of Semetic or other ethnic origin."
54. ^ D. McDowall, A modern history of the Kurds, 504 pp., I.B. Taris Publishers, 2004. p.9: "The Arab Rawadid tribe, which moved into Kurdistan at the beginning of the Abbasid era (750 CE) was considered to be Kurdish within 200 years, although its Arab origin was well known."
55. ^ John Limbert, The Origins and Appearance of the Kurds in Pre-Islamic Iran, Iranian Studies, Vol.1, No.2, Spring 1968, pp.41-51. p.42: "Some Kurdish tribes have given themselves Arab origins-- Arab tribes would go to the mountains, mingle with foreigners, and forget their mother tongue. These Arab genealogies may have a factual basis when we consider that the Kurds are apparently not homogeneous, but an amalgam of various ethnic elements."
56. ^ W. Jwaideh, The Kurdish national movement: its origins and development, 419 pp., Syracuse University Press, 2006. p.11:"Despite the fact that the Kurds speak dialects akin to Persian, they are by no means a purely Iranian people", "The development of the Kurds Iranian character was at first slow and gradual process", "The Iranization of the Zagros and the Taurus mountain ranges was brought about by the appearance of the Medes, the Persians and other Iranian peoples."
57. ^ M. Van Bruinessen, The Ethnic Identity of the Kurds, pp.613-621 in Ethnic groups in Republic of Turkey, ed. by P.A. Andrews and R. Benninghaus, 664 pp., Dr. Ludwig Reichert Verlag, 1989. p.619:"Karakeçili tribe located in the southwest of Diyarbakir are kurdophone, but according to local tradition they were originally Turkmen from Western Anatolia, who had been settled in this region by Sultan Selim I after the Ottoman conquest. Their process of Kurdification must have been completed before the 18th century, for the descendants of a section of this tribe who moved to Haymana (south of Ankara) around that time also continue to speak Kurdish."
58. ^ S. Mutlu, Ethnic Kurds in Turkey, International Journal of Middle East Studies, pp.517-541, Vol.28, No.4, 1996. p.519:"Some Turkish tribes living among Kurds, such as Karakeçili, Türkan and Beğdili also became Kurdish speakers."
59. ^ D. McDowall, A Modern History of the Kurds, 515 pp., I.B. Tauris & Co., 2004. p.9: "There can be no doubt that at a later stage certain Arab and Turkoman tribes became Kurdish by culture."
60. ^ M. Leezenberg, Gorani Influence on Central Kurdish, Substratum or Prestige Borrowing?, Conference on Bilingualism in the Iranian World, Germany, 1992. "The Shabak as well as Zengana tribes are in fact descendants from the partly Turcoman shia tribes that migrated in the East of Ottoman empire and in Safavid Persia until the 17th century. Zengana traditionally lived southeast of Kirkuk and Khanaqin and they seem to have largely assimilated to their Sorani-speaking neighbors."
61. ^ D. McDowall, A Modern History of the Kurds, 515 pp., I.B. Tauris & Co., 2004. p.12:"In the 1940s, a shrinking Armenian but Kurdish-speaking tribe with a tenuous grasp of Christian doctrine was noticed in central Kurdistan, where it was progressively merging with a Kurdish tribe."
62. ^ Martin Van Bruinessen, Genocide in Kurdistan?: The Suppression of the Dersim Rebellion In Turkey (1937-38) and the Chemical War Against the Iraqi Kurds (1988) in Genocide: conceptual and historical dimensions, by George J. Andreopoulos, 280 pp., Scholarly Book Services Inc., 2002. p.166: "Many of the Dersim Kurds are partly of Armenian descent- Dersim used to have a large Armenian population. Even well before the Armenian massacres(1915), many local Armenians voluntarily assimilated, becoming Alevi Kurds".
63. ^ Matti Moosa, Extremist Shiites: the ghulat sects, , 580 pp., Syracuse University Press, 1987. p.433:"One of the Kurdish tribes in the province of Sivas is possibly of Armenian origin. The Kizilbash Kurds retain certain Christian practices and sometimes call themselves Christians. There is evidence that some of the Kizilbash Kurds of Dersim came originally from Armenia".
64. ^ Edwin Munsell Bliss, Turkey and the Armenian atrocities, 574 pp., Meshag Publishers, California, 1982, p.89:"Many of the Kurds of that section (Kharput) were originally of Armenian origin."
65. ^ Abbas-Ali Madih, The Kurds of Khorasan, Iran and the Caucasus, pp.11-31, Vol.11, 2007. p.14: "Even the presence of a certain Armenian ethnic element in the bulk of the Khorasani Kurds can not be totally excluded. In my field works, while identifying villages in the district of Chenaran (between Quchan and Mashad), for instance, I came across people who were claiming to be of Armenian origin." p.15:"Even in a superficial skimming of the language of the Khorasani Kurds, a number of important borrowings from Armenian become apparent. In the phonological system of the Khorasani Kurmanji, the Armenian trace is also visible. Also, after winnowing, when the work on the thrashing-floor is over, some groups of the Khorasani Kurds draw a cross-sign on the grain heaps cleaned from the husk, thus rendering homage to an old tradition"
66. ^ Adherents.com: By Location
67. ^ G.S. Harris, Ethnic Conflict and the Kurds in the Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science, pp.118-120, 1977
68. ^ Introduction. Genocide in Iraq: The Anfal Campaign Against the Kurds (Human Rights Watch Report, 1993).
69. ^ G.S. Harris, Ethnic Conflict and the Kurds in the Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science, p.121, 1977
70. ^ M. Farouk-Sluglett, P. Sluglett, J. Stork, Not Quite Armageddon: Impact of the War on Iraq, MERIP Reports, July-September 1984, p.24
71. ^ Genocide in Iraq: The Anfal Campaign Against the Kurds
72. ^ Security Council Resolution 688, 5 April 1991.
73. ^ D. McDowall, A Modern History of The Kurds, I.B. Tauris, 504 pp., 2004.(see pp.373,375)
74. ^ Johnathan C. Randal, After such knowledge, what forgiveness?: my encounters with Kurdistan, Westview Press, 368 pp., 1998.(see pp.107-108)
75. ^ http://www.newyorker.com/online/content/articles/031222on_onlineonly04
76. ^ FOXNews.com - Kurds Rejoice, But Fighting Continues in North - U.S. & World
77. ^ CNN.com - Coalition makes key advances in northern Iraq - April 10, 2003
78. ^ The Scotsman
79. ^ Full Text of Iraqi Constitution, The Washington Post, October 2005.
80. ^ Ethnologue census of languages in Asian portion of Turkey
81. ^ http://countrystudies.us/turkey/24.htm
82. ^ Linguistic and Ethnic Groups in Turkey
83. ^ H. Hannum, Autonomy, Sovereignty, and Self-determination, 534 pp., University of Pennsylvania Press, 1996, ISBN 0812215729, 9780812215724 (see page 186).
84. ^ a b Reşat Kasaba, The Cambridge History of Turkey, 600 pp., Cambridge University Press, 2008, ISBN 0521620961, 9780521620963 (see page 340)
85. ^ Reşat Kasaba, The Cambridge History of Turkey, 600 pp., Cambridge University Press, 2008, ISBN 0521620961, 9780521620963 (see page 348)
86. ^ COUNCIL COMMON POSITION 2008/586/CFSP of 15 July 2008: updating Common Position 2001/931/CFSP on the application of specific measures to combat terrorism and repealing Common Position 2007/871/CFSP
87. ^ Radu, Michael. (2001). "The Rise and Fall of the PKK", Orbis. 45(1):47-64.
88. ^ Michael M. Gunter, The Kurds and the future of Turkey, 194 pp., Palgrave Macmillan, 1997. (p.66)
89. ^ Michael M. Gunter, The Kurds and the future of Turkey, 194 pp., Palgrave Macmillan, 1997. (pp.15, 66)
90. ^ Bulent Gokay, The Kurdish Question in Turkey: Historical Roots, Dometic Concerns and International Law, in Minorities, Peoples and Self-Determination, Ed. by Nazila Ghanea and Alexandra Xanthaki, 352 pp., Martinus Nijhoff/Brill Publishers, 2005. (p.332)
91. ^ J. C. Randal, After Such Knowledge, What Forgiveness?, 356 pp., Westview Press, 1999, ISBN 0-8133-3580--9, p.258
92. ^ J. C. Randal, After Such Knowledge, What Forgiveness?, 356 pp., Westview Press, 1999, ISBN 0-8133-3580-9, p.259
93. ^ a b Iran: Ethnic Groups, Encyclopaedia Britannica.
94. ^ Meet the Kurdish guerrillas who want to topple the Tehran regime. - By Graeme Wood - Slate Magazine
95. ^ a b A People Without a Country: The Kurds and Kurdistan By Gérard Chaliand, Abdul Rahman Ghassemlou, Marco Pallis, pg. 205
96. ^ Fifteenth periodic report of States parties due in 1998: Islamic Republic of Iran
97. ^ a b c M. Rubin, Are Kurds a Pariah Minority?, Social Research, Vol.70, No.1, Spring 2003, pp.295-330
98. ^ The Security of Southwest Asia by Zalmay Khalilza, page 191, University of Michigan Publishing
99. ^ A Chilling Photograph's Hidden History, The Wall Street Journal, Dec 2, 2006.
100. ^ Pulitzer Prize photographer is revealed, 26 years later, The Independent, Dec 9, 2006.
101. ^ alefbe.com
102. ^ Iran: Amnesty International calls for an urgent investigation into the killing of demonstrators.
103. ^ Iran: Threats against Kurdish human rights defenders must stop
104. ^ Status of minorities
105. ^ Amnesty International
106. ^ Iran's Waning Human Rights (The New York Times)
107. ^ World Gazetteer
108. ^ Syria: End persecution of human rights defenders and human rights activists.
109. ^ a b Syria: The Silenced Kurds
110. ^ Essential Background: Overview of human rights issues in Syria. Human Rights Watch, 31-12-2004.
111. ^ Syria's Kurds Struggle for Rights
112. ^ a b The Media Line
113. ^ Syria: Address Grievances Underlying Kurdish Unrest
114. ^ Serhildana 12ê Adarê ya Kurdistana Suriyê.
115. ^ Knowledge, Culture, and Power: International Perspectives on Literacy as Policy and Practice By Peter Freebody, Anthony R. Welch, pg.40
116. ^ The Encyclopaedia of Islam: Supplement : Fascicules 1-2, By Clifford Edmund Bosworth, E. Van Donzel, B. Lewis, pg. 63
117. ^ The Sword of Persia: Nader Shah, from Tribal Warrior to Conquering Tyrant, By Michael Axworthy, pg. 88
118. ^ Fisk, R. The Great War for Civilisation: The Conquest of the Middle East, p.322. Vintage. ISBN 978-1400075171
119. ^ Kurds and Kurdistan: A General Background, p.22
120. ^ MP: Failed asylum seekers must go back - Dewsbury Reporter
121. ^ 'I will not be muzzled' – Malik
122. ^ UK Polling Report Election Guide: Dewsbury
123. ^ "The Kurds and Islam". International Turkey Network. Archived from the original on July 3, 2007. http://web.archive.org/web/20070703230947/http://www.itnet.org/kurds_islam.html.
124. ^ a b Martin van Bruinessen, When Haji Bektash Still Bore the Name of Sultan Sahak: Notes on the Ahl-i Haqq of the Guran district, in Alexandre Popovic & Gilles Veinstein (eds), Bektachiyya: études sur l'ordre mystique des Bektachis et les groupes relevant de Hadji Bektach. Istanbul: Éditions Isis, 1995, pp. 117-138.
125. ^ MOJAN MEMBRADO, "JEYḤUNĀBĀDI, ḤĀJJ NEʿMAT-ALLĀH MOKRI" in Encyclopedia Iranica. "Ḥājj Neʿmat-Allāh compiled and commented upon the existing material of the Ahl-e Ḥaqq tradition, stating his dismay at how far the Yāresān (i.e., Ahl-e Ḥaqq) had strayed from their core principles, and how those who at one time strove to realize the four pillars of purity, rectitude, self-effacement, and self-abnegation (pāki, rāsti, nisti, redā)
126. ^ Jean During, "Notes Sur L'Angelgie Ahl-e-Haqq" in Gilles Veinstein, Syncrétismes et hérésies dans l'Orient seljoukide et ottoman (XIVe-XVIIIe siècles): actes du colloque du collège de France, octobre 2001
127. ^ Yazidis, Encyclopaedia Iranica.
128. ^ Religion: Judaism
129. ^ Jewish Subjects and their Tribal Chieftains in Kurdistan: A Study in Survival, By Mordechai Zaken. Published by Brill: • August 2007 • ISBN 978 9004161 90 0 • Hardback (xxii, 364 pp.) • Jewish Identities in a Changing World, vol. 9
130. ^ "Iraqi Kurds". culturalorientation.net. Archived from the original on September 2, 2006. http://web.archive.org/web/20060902043336/http://www.culturalorientation.net/kurds/krelig.html.
131. ^ Yol (1982)
132. ^ W. Juwaideh, The Kurdish national movement: its origins and development, 419 pp., Syracuse University Press, 2006.(see p.41),

Bibliography

* Barth, F. 1953. Principles of Social Organization in Southern Kurdistan. Bulletin of the University Ethnographic Museum 7. Oslo.
* Hansen, H.H. 1961. The Kurdish Woman's Life. Copenhagen. Ethnographic Museum Record 7:1-213.
* Leach, E.R. 1938. Social and Economic Organization of the Rowanduz Kurds. London School of Economics Monographs on Social Anthropology 3:1-74.
* Longrigg, S.H. 1953. Iraq, 1900-1950. London.
* Masters, W.M. 1953. Rowanduz. Ph.D. dissertation, University of Michigan.

External links

* Kurds and Kurdistan, Encyclopaedia of Islam.
* Kurds, Encyclopaedia Britannica.
* Kurd, Encyclopaedia Britannica.
* The Kurds: People without a country, Encyclopaedia Britannica.
* The Kurdish Institute of Paris Kurdish language, history, books and latest news articles.
* The Encyclopaedia of Kurdistan
* Istanbul Kurdish Institute
* The Kurdish Center of International Pen
* Kurdish Library, supported by the Swedish Government.
* Yazidism: Historical Roots, International Journal of Kurdish Studies, January 2005.
* Ethnic Cleansing and the Kurds
* The Kurds in the Ottoman Hungary by Zurab Aloian
* "The Other Iraq" Kurdish Information Website

The Kurdish Issue in Turkey

* A report on the Kurdish IDP's - 2005
* A German newspaper's take on the Kurdish issue - 2005
* The Guardian - What's in a name? Too much in Turkey - 2001
* McKiernan, Kevin (March/April 1999). "Turkey's war on the Kurds". Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists (Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists) 55 (2): 26–37. doi:10.2968/055002008. http://thebulletin.metapress.com/content/wg3804452810m184/?p=ee9133a6962b49f093b163254a36d80c&pi=7. Retrieved 2009-08-04.

24 Ocak 2010 Pazar

Osmanlı'da Yönetim Organı

Osmanlı'da Yönetim Organı

Osmanli Devletinde Yonetim


Tags
1-divan-ı hümayün
2-üyeler
3-Vezir-i azam
4-Kubbealtı vezirleri
5-Kadıasker
6-Defterdar
7-Nişancı -
8-Kaptan-ı Derya
9-Yeniçeri Ağası

Divan-ı Hümayun nedir?

Divan-ı Hümayun toplantılarına kimler katılır?
<
Divan-ı Hümayun hangi işlerle ilgilenir?


Divan-ı Hümayun’un önemi ve üyeleri
Osmanlı Devleti tarihinde, çok önemli bir yer teşkil etmiş olan Divan-ı Hümayun’un menşei ve gelişimi hakkında kısa bir bilgi vermek yerinde olacaktır.
Divan, Türkçeye, Arapça ve Farsçadan geçmiş olup, büyük meclis,[1] toplantı ve kurul anlamlarına gelmekle beraber konumuz açısından önem arz etmeyen birkaç anlamı daha karşılamaktadır. Osmanlı Devleti’nde, hem toplantının kendisi hem de toplantı yapılan yer bu kelime ile karşılanıyordu[2]. Divan denildiğinde, bize ilk önce merkez teşkilatındaki Divan-ı Hümayun’u çağrıştırır. Devlet merkezindeki başka kurullar ve yine eyaletlerdeki valilerin meclisleri de divan olarak adlandırılmıştır.
Divan-ı Hümayun padişahın divanıdır. Divan-ı Hümayun geniş anlamıyla bir kuruldan daha öteye uzanır. Osmanlı yönetim dilinde, Divan-ı Hümayun aynı zamanda bu kurula bağlı olan kalemleriyle yani bürokratik örgütüyle devletin en büyük organını belirtiyordu. Dar anlamıyla Divan-ı Hümayun, çeşitli devlet işlerinin görüşülüp karara bağlandığı bir kuruldur[3].
Divanın kökeni, İslâmiyet’in ilk dönemlerine kadar uzanır. İslâm, Türk ve Türk-İslâm devletlerinde çok çeşitli hizmetlerin görüşüldüğü bir kurul-organ olarak divanın Osmanlılarda da Orhan Bey zamanından beri[4] varolduğu bilinmektedir. Divanın tam olarak ne zaman ortaya çıktığı, üyeleri ve çalışma şekli hakkında Fatih zamanına kadar kesin bilgiler vermek olanaksızdır. Orhan Bey döneminde belirginleşen divan, Orhan Bey’in vezir ataması ile bir gelişme dönemine girmiş, I. Murat zamanında vezir sayısının artması, kadıaskerliğin teşkili ile gelişmesi devam etmiştir. Yıldırım Bayezid döneminde bu gelişim devam etmiştir. I. Mehmet zamanına kadar divan geleneği yerleşmiş ki, fetret döneminden sonra da divan aynen kalmıştır[5]. II. Murat döneminde divan daha da gelişmiş, her gün toplanan divanda vezir sayısı üçe çıkmış, divan teşrifatı artmıştır. Padişah divan toplantılarına başkanlık etmiştir. II. Mehmet dönemi, Divan-ı Hümayun açısından bir dönüm noktası teşkil etmektedir. Fatih’in mutlak hükümdarlık anlayışı ve bu anlayış çerçevesinde hazırlanmış olan teşkilat ve teşrifat kanunnâmesi divanı daha kolay anlamamıza yardımcı olmuştur[6]. Fatih divan üzerinde kesin bir denetim kurmuştur. Divan-ı Hümayun deyimi Fatih döneminde kullanılmaya başlanmıştır.
XV. yy sonlarından itibaren Divan-ı Hümayun bürokrasisi daha da gelişmiş, XVI. yüzyıldan itibaren klâsik yapısına kavuşmuştur. Divan-ı Hümayun II. Bayezid ve I. Selim dönemlerinde gelişimini sürdürmüş, Kanuni Sultan Süleyman döneminde tam kurumsal yapısına kavuşmuştur[7]. Bu dönemden sonra bir müddet durumunu korumuş olan Divan-ı Hümayun XVII. yy ortalarından itibaren fonksiyonları azalmaya başlamış XVII. yy sonlarına doğru devlet işleri vezir-i âzam divanında görüşülmeye başlanmıştır. İşlevlerini kaybeden Divan-ı Hümayun sembolik olarak da olsa devletin yıkılışına kadar devam etmiştir.

Divan-ı Hümayun, kuruluş ve yükselme dönemlerinde, Osmanlı Devleti’nde merkezi bürokrasinin en yetkili kurumu olup Osmanlı idarî başarısının sembolü olmuştur.
Osmanlı Devleti’nde, padişah, yasama(örfî), yürütme ve yargı yetkilerini kendisinde toplayan bir şahsiyettir. Padişah bu yetkilerinin çoğunu, kendisine mutlak vekil olarak atadığı vezir-i âzam yoluyla kullanmaktadır. Ancak, vezir-i âzam kendisine verilen bu yetkileri padişahın divanındaki diğer üyelerle istişare yaptıktan sonra padişaha da onaylatarak( her konuda padişahın onayını alması gerekmiyor) kullanabilmektedir. Başdefterdar ve nişancının bazı yetkileri de padişahın bu mutlak yetkisini kısıtlamaktadır. Bu çok önemli görevleri üstlenen bu görevliler, Divan-ı Hümayun üyesidirler ve bu yetkilerini orada aldıkları kararlarla kullanabilmektedirler. Merkez örgütündeki baş görevlilerin toplandığı bir kurul olarak Divan-ı Hümayun, padişahın tüm yetkilerinin bir arada bulunduğu bir organdır. Bu yetkileri bünyesinde barındıran Divan-ı Hümayun, devletin iç ve dış siyasetinin belirlendiği bir kurul olarak hizmet etmektedir[8].
Divan-ı Hümayun’un sahip olduğu yetkiler ve işleyişinde sağlanan başarı Osmanlı Devleti’nin merkez teşkilatında, onu devletin en saygın organı olmasını sağlamıştır. Divan-ı Hümayun bir kurul organ-olarak Osmanlılardan önceki ve Osmanlıların çağdaşı İslâm devletlerdeki benzeri kurumlardan çok farklıdır[9]. Divan-ı Hümayun’da birinci ve ikinci derecedeki siyasî, idarî, askerî, örfî, şer’î, adlî ve malî işler, şikayet ve davalar görüşülmektedir[10].
Divan-ı Hümayun devletin en yüksek organı olması ve işlevselliğindeki başarısından dolayı, devletin diğer kurumları tarafından da model olarak alınmıştır.

Divan-ı Hümayun üyeleri şunlardır: Başta vezir-i âzam olmak üzere, kubbealtı vezirleri, Rumeli ve Anadolu kadıaskerleri , defterdarlar ve nişancıdır. Vezir rütbesinde bulunmak şartıyla kaptan-ı derya ve yeniçeri ağası, yine merkezde bulundukları taktirde Rumeli Beylerbeyi de divan üyeleri arasında yer almaktadırlar. Şeyhülislam Divan-ı Hümayun üyesi değildir; ancak kendisinden bilgi alınmak üzere divana çağrılabilirdi. Şimdi Divan-ı Hümayun üyelerini kısaca tanıtalım.
Vezir-i âzam: Osmanlı Devleti’nde ilk vezir Orhan Bey tarafından atanmıştır. I. Murad döneminde vezir sayısı ikiye çıkmış ve böylece ilk vezir vezir-i âzamlık ünvanını almıştır[11]. Vezir-i âzamlar, birkaçı dışında, Fatih dönemine kadar hep ilmiye sınıfından seçilmişlerdir. Fatih’in devşirme sistemini ön plana çıkarmasıyla, XVII. yy ortalarına kadar vezir-i âzamlığa birkaç tanesi dışında hepsi devşirmelerden getirilmiştir. Fatih, böylece vezir-i âzamları kendi otoritesi altına almış ve onlara çok geniş yetkiler vermiştir.
Fatih kanunnâmesinde vezir-i âzamın devlet yönetimindeki yeri ve yetkileri kesin olarak belirtilmiştir. Kanunnâmede vezir-i âzamın, vezirlerin beylerbeylerin başı, devlet işlerinin mutlak vekili olduğu ve teşrifatta herkesten önde geldiği belirtilmiştir. Vezir-i âzam, din devlet ve saltanata ait bütün hizmetlerin yerine getirilmesi, had, kısas, hapis, sürgün, bütün çeşitleriyle taz’ir ve siyaset cezalarını infaz, memleketin idari yapısını tanzim, tımar, zeamet ve ulufeleri tespit, beylerbeylik ,sancak beyliği, mütevellilik, imamlık, kadılık ve benzeri memuriyetler olmak üzere bütün askerî ve ilmiye sınıfına mensup memurları tayin ve azletme gibi görevleri vardır[12]. Vezir-i âzam, bu yetkilerini kullanırken kararlarını telhis yoluyla padişaha bildirmeli, şer’î ve örfî kanunlara uymak zorundadır.
Vezir-i âzam, padişahın mutlak vekilidir. Mutlak vekil oldukları halde padişahın mutlak iradesini her zaman üzerlerinde hissetmişlerdir. Yani yetkileri padişah iradesi karşısında kısıtlanır. Bazı alanlarda ise yetkileri kendiliğinden kısıtlanır. Defterdar bazı konularda vezir-i âzamdan daha yetkilidir. Yine vezir-i âzam, nişancıların her işine karışamamaktadır. Fatih kanunnâmesinde vezir-i âzamın diğer vezirlerle, defterdarla istişare etmesi buyrularak devlet işlerinde her zaman tek başına karar verme olanağı kısıtlanmıştır[13].
Vezir-i âzam, padişah fermanıyla atanır ve diğer vezirlerden farklı olarak kendisine padişahın mührü verilirdi. Padişah divanı olan Divan-ı Hümayun’a başkanlık ederdi. O gelmeden divan toplantısı yapılamazdı. Herhangi bir sebeple divan toplantısına katılamayacaksa veya serdar-ı ekrem olarak ordunun başında bulunuyorsa, vekili olan “sadaret kaymakamı” Divan-ı Hümayun toplantısına başkanlık ederdi.
Serdar-ı ekrem olarak ordunun başında sefere katıldığında yetki ve sorumlulukları artardı. Yaptıklarından padişaha karşı sorumlu olmak kaydıyla her türlü icraatında son kararı verir, yanında götürdüğü tuğralı kağıtlara ferman ve beratlar yazarak ilgilileri cezalandırır veya mükafatlandırırdı.
Vezir-i âzam, Divan-ı Hümayun toplantıları dışında paşa kapısı veya bâbı âli denilen kendine ait konağında görevlerini yerine getirirdi. Vezir-i âzam İkindi divanı, Cuma divanı ve Çarşamba divanı gibi divanlar da kurdururdu.
Vezir-i âzamlara görevleri karşılığında gelirleri çok yüksek olan haslar verilmiştir.
Kubbealtı vezirleri: Vezir sayısının artması sonucu vezirler, merkez dışında eyaletlere beylerbeyi olarak görevlendirilmeye başlandılar. Bunlar içinde ise en kıdemlisi Rumeli Beylerbeyi oldu. Rumeli Beylerbeyi daha da yükselince merkeze alındı ve Divan-ı Hümayun üyesi oldu. Bunlar, divan kubbesi altında görev yaptıklarından dolayı kendilerine kubbealtı vezirleri denilmiştir. Bu vezirlerin belirli bir sayıları yoktu. Sayıları zamanla yediye kadar çıkmış[14], azalmıştır. XVIII. yy ikinci çeyreğinden itibaren bu vezirler atanmamaya başlanmıştır.
Ahmet Mumcu(Divan-ı Hümayun), bu vezirliğin iki nedenle kurulmuş olabileceğini belirtmektedir. İlk olarak, XV. yüzyıldan başlayarak, devlet bürokrasisinin gelişmesi merkezde deneyler geçirmiş, memleketin her yanını tanıyan devlet adamlarının bulundurulmasını gerekli kılmıştır. Bu vezirlerin, Divan-ı Hümayun’da görüşlerinden yararlanılmakta ve bunlar, vezir-i âzam tarafından kendilerine verilen bazı görevleri yapmaktadırlar. Bu kişiler, devletin en üst makamını geçmeleri muhtemel kişiler olup, taşra deneyimlerinin yanında merkez örgütünün de çalışma biçimini iyice öğrenmeleri sağlanır.
İkinci olarak, merkezde yetenekli, belli bir görevi olmayan yüksek vasıflı divan üyeleri her zaman için yedek bir güçtür. Örneğin, ani bir savaş tehlikesi karşısında serdar veya serasker olarak ordunun başında sefere gönderilmektedir.
Kadıasker : İlk kadıaskerliğin 1360 veya 1362 tarihlerinde kurulmuş olduğu yönünde görüşler vardır. Kadıaskerlik 1480’e kadar bir iken bu tarihten sonra Rumeli ve Anadolu kadıaskerliği olmak üzere ikiye çıkarılmıştır[15]. Yavuz Sultan Selim’in Doğu Anadolu ile Maraş, Malatya ve çevresini ilhakı(1576) ile divan heyetine dahil olmayan Arap ve Acem kadıaskerliği ismiyle üçüncü bir kadıaskerlik kuruldu. Daha sonra 1523 yılında bu kadıaskerlik kaldırılıp, bu kadıaskerliğin işleri Anadolu kadıaskerliğine devredilmiştir.
Fatih kanunnâmesinde belirtildiğine göre, kadıaskerler, Divan-ı Hümayun’da ve teşrifatta vezir-i âzam ve vezirlerden sonra gelirler. Divan-ı Hümayun’da vezir-i âzamın soluna otururlar ve devletinin askeri sınıfının şer’î ve hukukî işlerine bakarlardı. İlmiye sınıfını divanda bunlar temsil etmektedir.
Divan-ı Hümayun’da yalnız Rumeli kadıaskeri dava dinlerdi. Eğer işler fazla olursa, vezir-i âzamın müsaadesiyle Anadolu kadıaskeri de davalara bakardı.
Kadıaskerler divanda dava dinleme işinden başka, salı ve çarşamba günleri dışında kendi divanlarında kendilerine ait veya kendilerine havale olmuş hukukî işlere de bakarlardı.
Kadıasker, XVI. yüzyılın ikinci yarısına kadar müderris ve kadıların tayininde vezir-i âzama arzda bulunurlardı, sonraları bu iş şeyhülislama devredilmiştir.
XVII.yy başlarından itibaren kadıaskerliğin önemi azalmış, azil ve tayinleri şeyhülislamlar vasıtasıyla yapılmaya başlanmıştır.
Kadıaskerliğin süresi XVII. yüzyıla kadar iki yıl iken bundan sonra bir yıla inmiştir[16].

Defterdar : Divan-ı Hümayun’un aslî üyelerinden biri de Osmanlı Devleti’nin malî işleri kendilerine havale edilen defterdarlardır. İslâm devletlerinde kullanılan mustevfi, İlhanlılarda da kullanılan defteri memalik, Osmanlılar tarafından defterdar ve defterdarlık olarak kullanılmıştır.
Osmanlı Devleti’nde, defterdarın ne zaman ortaya çıktığı tam olarak bilinmemekle beraber, XV. yy ilk yarısında varolduğu bilinmektedir[17].
Fatih zamanında memleketin genişlemesi üzerine, Rumeli ve Anadolu defterdarlığı olmak üzere sayıları ikiye çıkarılmış ve Rumeli defterdarına da başdefterdar denilmiştir. XVI. yy ortalarında Rumeli ve Anadolu defterdarlıklarına bağlı yalılar ayrılarak İstanbul’daki mukataalar da buraya verilmek suretiyle devlet merkezinde şıkk-ı sani ünvanıyla üçüncü bir defterdarlık kurulmuş böylece Divan-ı Hümayun’da olan defterdar sayısı üçe çıkmıştır. XVII. yy sonlarında, şıkk-ı salis adında dördüncü bir defterdarlık daha kurulmuş ancak, bu defterdarlık kısa bir süre sonra kaldırılmıştır[18]. Mısır fethedildikten sonra, merkezi Halep olarak kurulan Arap ve Acem defterdarlığı, Diyarbakır, Şam, Trablusgarp ve Erzurum olarak beş defterdarlığa ayrılmıştır. Sonradan Sivas, Karaman ve Anadolu eyaletlerinde de birer defterdarlık kurulmuş, taşradakilere kenar defterdarlıkları denilmiştir.
Fatih kanunnâmesine göre başdefterdar, özel bir yetkiye sahiptir. Padişahın malının vekili odur. Vezir-i âzam ise onun denetleyicisidir[19].
Başdefterdar mali konularda kendi divanını kurar, mali davaları dinler, gerekirse padişah adına onun tuğrası ile hükümler verir. Devlet mallarının tahsili için gerekirse mültezimleri hapseder, mukataaları tevcih eder. Başdefterdar hazır bulunmadan defterhane vezir-i âzamca dahi açılamazdı.

Nişancı : Osmanlı devlet teşkilatında, XVIII. yy başlarına kadar devler kanunlarını iyi bilen, yeni kanunlar ile eskilerini ve şer’î hukukî esasları telif etme gücüne sahip olan ve Divan-ı Hümayun’da bu meselelerle alakalı fikirlerinden yararlanılabilen, padişaha yazılacak nameleri ve vezirlerin menşur ve beratlarını yazan ve inceleyen nişancı, yaptığı bu işlerden dolayı tuğraî, tuğrakeş-i ahkâm, tuğra-i şerif hizmetlisi ve müftî-i kanun gibi adlarla da anılırdı[20].
Nişancı, Türk-İslâm devletlerinden geçerek Osmanlı Devleti’ne girmiş ancak, tam olarak ne zaman ve nasıl ortaya çıktığı bilinmemektedir. XV. yy ilk yarısında kesin[21] olarak kullanıldığı bilinmektedir.
Fatih kanunnâmesinde, nişancının görev ve yetkileri konusunda bilgilerin bulunması, bu dönemde nişancının iyice şekillendiğini göstermektedir.
Nişancılar, Divan-ı Hümayun’da vezirlik, kadıaskerlik ve başdefterdarlıktan sonra gelirler. Zamanla, vezirlik kazanması ve yaşlılık durumlarına göre defterdarlar ile aralarında önem sırası değişiklik göstermiştir. Vezirlikleri yoksa arza çıkamazlardı.
Nişancı, padişah fermanlarına tuğra çekmekten başka, fermanların hazırlanmasını sağlamak, en önemli fermanları bizzat kaleme almak, yeni konulacak yada değiştirilecek örfî hukuk kurallarının saptanması gibi işlerle uğraşırdı. Bundan başka, defterdarların hazırladıkları belgelerin son denetimini yapmak, merkeze gelen yakınmaları sıraya koymak ve niteliklerine göre sınıflandırmak gibi görevleri de vardır[22].
Divan-ı Hümayun çalışmalarının hazırlanması ve yürütülmesi ile ilgili çok önemli bir görevi yerine getiren nişancı bizzat padişah tarafından atanmaktadır. Nişancılığın bir paye olarak da verildiği olmuştur.
Nişancı, Divan-ı Hümayun bürokrasisinin şefi olarak bu bürokrasi içinde çalışan tüm hizmetlilerin de başıdır.
Nişancılar, XVIII. yy ortalarına doğru önemlerini kaybetmeye başlamışlar önemli işlerini reisülküttablara bırakmışlardır. 1836’da nişancılık kaldırılmış ve görevleri defter eminliğine verilmiştir.

Rumeli Beylerbeyi : Beylerbeyi, hem askeri hem de idari amir olarak bulunduğu eyalette padişahın temsilcisidir. İlk beylerbeylik Orhan Bey zamanında ortaya çıkmış, Anadolu ve Rumeli Beylerbeyi olarak ikiye ayrılışının Çelebi Mehmet zamanında[23] gerçekleştiği tahmin edilmekle beraber kesin tarihi bilinmemektedir[24]. Rumeli Beylerbeyi daha kıdemlidir. Rütbeleri yükselince kubbealtı vezirliğine atanıyorlar ve Divan-ı Hümayun’un üyesi oluyorlardı.
1536 tarihinden itibaren Rumeli Beylerbeyi, Divan-ı Hümayun üyesi olarak merkezde bulunduğu zamanlarda divan toplantılarına katılmıştır. Bu tarihten önce Rumeli Beylerbeyi, Divan-ı Hümayun üyesi değildi[25].

Kaptan-ı Derya : Osmanlı Devleti’nde bahriye teşkilatının en büyük amiri ve donanmanın başkumandanıdır. Denizciliğin gelişmesi ile vezirlik verilen kaptan-ı derya, Divan-ı Hümayun üyesi olarak, merkezde bulunduğu zamanlarda divan toplantılarına katılmıştır. Divan-ı hümayun’da, kendisine havale olunan bahriye teşkilatı ile ilgili meselelerle ilgilenirdi.
Bahriye teşkilatındaki tayinler, kaptan-ı derya tarafından yapılmaktadır. Önemli işleri vezir-i âzama arz ederdi. Bahriye ile ilgili işler için hüküm yazmaya ve tuğra çekmeye yetkisi vardı[26].

Yeniçeri Ağası : Yeniçeri ağası, yeniçeri ocağı ve acemi ocaklarından sorumlu tek kişidir. Yine divanda görevli olan rikab-ı hümayun ve özengi ağaları denen ağaların reisidir. Böylece Divan-ı Hümayun toplantılarının teşrifatında çok önemli bir rolleri vardır. Yeniçeri ağası vezirlik rütbesi olursa Divan-ı Hümayun üyesi olarak toplantılara katılabilmektedir.
Yeniçeri ağasının arza çıkma yetkisi vardı. Eğer vezirlik rütbesi varsa divan üyeleri arasında arza iki kez çıkma imkanına sahip tek kişi oluyordu.
Divan toplantılarında, ocağa ait işlerle ve İstanbul’un asayişi ile ilgili konularla ilgilenirdi.





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[1] Abdullah Yeğin, Yeni Lügat, Hizmet Vakfı Yay., İstanbul.

[2] Ahmet Mumcu, Divan-ı Hümayun, Birey ve Toplum Yayınları, Ankara, Mayıs 1986, s.4.

[3] Mumcu, a.g.e., s.5.

[4] İ.H.Uzunçarşılı, Osmanlı Devleti Merkez ve Bahriye Teşkilatı, s.1.

[5] Mumcu , s.24.

[6] Mehmet İpşirli, Osmanlı Devleti Tarihi I(Edit. Ekmelettin İhsanoğlu),Yayınlayan: Feza Gazetecilik A.Ş., İstanbul, 1999, ss.158-159.

[7] Mumcu, ss.28-29.

[8] Mumcu, s.71-72.

[9] Mumcu, s.166.

[10] Uzunçarşılı, s.13.

[11] Fuat Köprülü, (Bizans Müesseselerinin Osmanlı müesseselerine Tesiri, 1986, s.41) devlet teşkilatının başında yalnız bir vezirin bulunduğu zamanlarda, vezir-i âzamlık yetkilerinin ona ait olduğunu belirtmektedir.

[12] İpşirli, s.164.

[13] Mumcu, s.36.

[14] Yılmaz Öztuna, (Osmanlı Devleti Tarihi 2, Kültür Bakanlığı Yay., Ankara, 1998. s.58) bu vezirlerin sayılarını en fazla olarak sekiz olduğu, genellikle de beş olduğunu belirtmektedir.

[15] Köprülü, s.55.

[16] Uzunçarşılı, ss.228-235.

[17] Uzunçarşılı, s.325.

[18] Uzunçarşılı, s.329.

[19] Mumcu, s.49.

[20] Halil İnalcık, İslâm Ansiklopedisi, Cilt:IX, s.299.

[21]İnalcık, s.299. ;Uzunçarşılı (Merkez Teşkilatı, s.214) da bu dönemde kullanılmaya başladığını söylüyor.

[22] Mumcu, s.47.

[23] Ahmet Mumcu(a.g.e. s.51), XIV. yy sonlarında ortaya çıktığını yazıyor.

[24] Köprülü, a.g.e. s.47-48.

[25] Mumcu, s.52.

[26] Osmanlı Tarihi Ansiklopedisi, Cilt.IV, Türkiye Gazetesi Yay.



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